Roger thanks (and Andrew) for looking that up and plotting. Would you replace previous NEC model plot with NTSC 1953 and post your graph over on the DisplayCal thread you recently commented... The graph clearly makes Vincent at DisplayCal's point about combined P3 / Adobe coverage possible with some new tech. And I think it will show that consumer displays (higher end) have finally arrived at the color spec laid down when ENIAC was the next big thing (figuratively haha) What are you opinions about the balance between Adobe RGB and Display P3 coverage in consumer gear? And challenges of wide-gamuts in general. I'm interested in your opinions as both what you think personally and your sense of industry trends. /wire On Fri, Nov 29, 2019 at 6:40 PM Roger Breton via colorsync-users < colorsync-users@lists.apple.com> wrote:
Thank you so much, Mr Rodney. Never knew why manufacturers could not publish this kind of data in their technical brochure.
A little graphing shows the improvements over the previous generation: https://1drv.ms/u/s!AkD78CVR1NBqkoAglHEpfO10xKmr_g?e=npCj5r
I can see they managed to get the red primary very close to the Cine-P3 red primary which, according to the P3 specs, is "made up of a 615nm monochromatic" source of light.
The green primary gives the impression that it is cleverly "sitting" between AdobeRGB's green primariy and Cine-P3's green primary.
The blue primary is also improved relative to the 271W.
I can't assess the black level, though. Being an OLED panel, it's supposed to have deeper black levels than an LCD panel.
I suppose you have a 10-bit end to end workflow?
May I ask the source of your numbers, Andrew? I1pro2? Multiprofiler? SpoectraView II? I found Multiprofiler numbers are very close to lab-grade instruments, at least in my experience.
Thank you so much for your help,
/ Roger www.graxx.ca
-----Original Message----- From: Andrew Rodney <andrew@digitaldog.net> Sent: Friday, November 29, 2019 9:13 PM To: Roger Breton <graxx@videotron.ca> Cc: 'colorsync-users?lists.apple.com' List < colorsync-users@lists.apple.com> Subject: Re: NEC PA271Q "Native" chromaticities
Here's what I see on mine, (full gamut) in SpectraView Info window:
Red: 0.683, 0.311 Green: 0.217, 0.721 Blue: 0.153, 0.045 Source: Calibration Sensor.
Hope that's useful.
Andrew Rodney http://www.digitaldog.net/
On Nov 29, 2019, at 7:04 PM, Roger Breton via colorsync-users <colorsync-users@lists.apple.com> wrote:
Would anyone have the 1931 CIE xy chromaticities of this monitor, by any chance? In its "Full", "Native" mode? It's not in the User Manual, it's not on NEC web site, it's not on some user review by PCMag or some other? It's probably shown on Multiprofiler but I don't have the version made for this monitor.
Curious to know how they can go about emulating both AdobeRGB and DCI-P3 at the same time.
Any help is appreciated / Roger
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