Re: Monitor Banding
Re: Monitor Banding
- Subject: Re: Monitor Banding
- From: neil snape <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 23:59:28 +0100
on 26/12/2001 23:11, Dan Reid at email@hidden wrote:
>
> My 4 year old Mitsu can still hit 86cd/m2 too. Might be a question of
>
> bumping out the old calibration lut first.
>
> Neil Snape email@hidden http://mapage.noos.fr/nsnape
>
>
My old Lacie 21/108 still hits 110 plus cd/m2 when I use precal. First I set
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the contrast at 100% then push the red gun to 100% and drop the green and
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blue to achieve my target white point. Drop the contrast setting to my
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desired luminance level and tweak the gain guns a little more. Right now the
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Lacie is at 78% contrast measuring around 100cd/m2 -- so I still have quite
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a bit of headroom to go brighter if need be.
>
As most of you are finding out the video card is a big factor. I use the
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(now defunct) IMX TwinTurbo. Also some monitor's have a switch to change the
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signal strength (video level) or something like that. Check out your
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monitor. On the Lacie (Mitsubishi) the setting is under the second page of
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the OSD. Need to hit the right arrow button and scroll down to select this
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setting. Changing the video level setting can increase the brightness
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significantly.
>
>
Yes, yes, yes I have been running this monitor for over three years every
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day with no screen savers.
>
Who says you can't do this stuff?
Screen savers are for Microsoft!
I use the same Twin Turbo on the LaCie-D2 (Mitsu of course). I could up the
red gun and get lots more brightness. I've tried it but was afraid of
blowing it up. Oh, BTW the TT card works better in Photoshop than this
crappy MX thing in the QuickSilver. That's another story.
Now I know that it has covered on the list before, and I could search my own
archives , but since we're here....
What is the better method and why
a)up the red gun and lower the contrast
b)leave the contrast at 100% and lower the red and other guns to make the
white?
After years of running all these screens at 6500K I've gone back to a
little over 5500K to match the white of the Just Normlicht 5000K light
boxes. Depends now more on the media , but press samples match closer.
Neil Snape email@hidden
http://mapage.noos.fr/nsnape