T Ty Roberta E. Lee Veteran Feb 22, 2008 #21 That's black crush. See if you can calibrate your set with Avia or something like that.
S ShaidarHaran hardware monkey Veteran Feb 22, 2008 #22 Doesn't the dynamic contrast throw off any calibration though? I mean, I can up the brightness but then other things become overly-bright.
Doesn't the dynamic contrast throw off any calibration though? I mean, I can up the brightness but then other things become overly-bright.
T Ty Roberta E. Lee Veteran Feb 22, 2008 #23 Probably. You might want to turn that off and instead create multiple profiles for different viewing conditions (night/day - whatever).
Probably. You might want to turn that off and instead create multiple profiles for different viewing conditions (night/day - whatever).
S ShaidarHaran hardware monkey Veteran Feb 22, 2008 #24 Blasphemy! I didn't pay for that fancy video processor not to use it
R RobertR1 Pro Legend Feb 22, 2008 #25 ShaidarHaran said: Blasphemy! I didn't pay for that fancy video processor not to use it Click to expand... Most of the "fancy" stuff is garbage and usually left turned off.
ShaidarHaran said: Blasphemy! I didn't pay for that fancy video processor not to use it Click to expand... Most of the "fancy" stuff is garbage and usually left turned off.
G Gubbi Veteran Feb 25, 2008 #26 RobertR1 said: Most of the "fancy" stuff is garbage and usually left turned off. Click to expand... Agreed. He'll be better off making profiles for gaming, movies, TV and TV/sports. And crushed blacks is a consequence of lack of contrast ratio. Cheers
RobertR1 said: Most of the "fancy" stuff is garbage and usually left turned off. Click to expand... Agreed. He'll be better off making profiles for gaming, movies, TV and TV/sports. And crushed blacks is a consequence of lack of contrast ratio. Cheers