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Started By
Message
How do I calibrate TV?
Posted on 6/19/14 at 10:15 pm
Posted on 6/19/14 at 10:15 pm
Recently, I bought a new TV and want to calibrate it for the best picture without hiring a professional.
Do I have to buy a calibration DVD? If so, are they Blu-Ray (don't have Blu-Ray player) or regular DVD? Which one is best and where do I buy it?
Is there a website that I can find the best settings for my TV? Or can it get me to as close as best without a DVD?
Thanks in advance for any guidance.
Do I have to buy a calibration DVD? If so, are they Blu-Ray (don't have Blu-Ray player) or regular DVD? Which one is best and where do I buy it?
Is there a website that I can find the best settings for my TV? Or can it get me to as close as best without a DVD?
Thanks in advance for any guidance.
Posted on 6/19/14 at 10:23 pm to nolatiger711
Select your the manufacturer of your set and then select the correct model #
LINK
LINK
This post was edited on 6/19/14 at 10:26 pm
Posted on 6/19/14 at 11:24 pm to nolatiger711
All TV's are different, a calibration suggestion on a forum like AVS or other website will get it better than stock, but the only way to truly calibrate a TV to near perfection is to buy the tools to do so and they aren't all that cheap.
If you aren't wanting to buy a Colorimeter and the PC software to do it professionally and get it perfect, I suggest buying Disney WOW.
If you're wanting to dip into the professional calibration area, I suggest the i1DisplayPro.
For your PC software to go with the i1 I suggest using HCFR.
If you aren't wanting to buy a Colorimeter and the PC software to do it professionally and get it perfect, I suggest buying Disney WOW.
If you're wanting to dip into the professional calibration area, I suggest the i1DisplayPro.
For your PC software to go with the i1 I suggest using HCFR.
This post was edited on 6/20/14 at 12:20 am
Posted on 6/20/14 at 12:08 am to nolatiger711
1. Plugging in other people's settings is likely just going to give you different errors than you started with, not necessarily better or worse, just different, and that's especially true for the advanced controls like White Balance, CMS, and 10-point gamma. If you try this, stick to the basic controls.
2. Your best bet is to download the free AVS 709 HD disc or files, which will help you set the basic controls, i.e. Brightness, Contrast, Color, Tint, and Sharpness. If your TV doesn't have a blue mode, you'll need a filter for Color and Tint, and discs like Disney WoW come with them. Then again, filters can be rather inaccurate, and using them can just give you different errors than leaving those controls untouched. Tint is usually on the money anyway.
3. Usually the "Cinema" mode or equivalent is the best starting point. If the warmest Color Temperature looks really wrong to you, you probably have no idea what a calibrated picture looks like and are used to settings that are out of whack.
4. After getting Brightness and Contrast in the ballpark, if the picture looks washed out, try increasing gamma, e.g. from 2.2 to 2.4. If you can't make anything out in dark scenes, try decreasing gamma, e.g. from 2.4 to 2.2.
5. Pay attention to grayscale steps and ramps in the pattern sets. You need them to be neutral shades of gray, or nothing will look right.
6. This isn't calibration. To calibrate a TV, you need a meter and software or hire a pro who will bring his own and save you from the learning curve.
7. The best website is probably avsforum.com. The best reviews are at the British site hdtvtest.co.uk, but the UK models don't always correspond directly to what we can get. The best thing I can say about CNet is the reviewer talks about specific scenes in real material.
2. Your best bet is to download the free AVS 709 HD disc or files, which will help you set the basic controls, i.e. Brightness, Contrast, Color, Tint, and Sharpness. If your TV doesn't have a blue mode, you'll need a filter for Color and Tint, and discs like Disney WoW come with them. Then again, filters can be rather inaccurate, and using them can just give you different errors than leaving those controls untouched. Tint is usually on the money anyway.
3. Usually the "Cinema" mode or equivalent is the best starting point. If the warmest Color Temperature looks really wrong to you, you probably have no idea what a calibrated picture looks like and are used to settings that are out of whack.
4. After getting Brightness and Contrast in the ballpark, if the picture looks washed out, try increasing gamma, e.g. from 2.2 to 2.4. If you can't make anything out in dark scenes, try decreasing gamma, e.g. from 2.4 to 2.2.
5. Pay attention to grayscale steps and ramps in the pattern sets. You need them to be neutral shades of gray, or nothing will look right.
6. This isn't calibration. To calibrate a TV, you need a meter and software or hire a pro who will bring his own and save you from the learning curve.
7. The best website is probably avsforum.com. The best reviews are at the British site hdtvtest.co.uk, but the UK models don't always correspond directly to what we can get. The best thing I can say about CNet is the reviewer talks about specific scenes in real material.
This post was edited on 6/20/14 at 12:12 am
Posted on 6/20/14 at 12:14 am to nolatiger711
Hire a pro. Their eyes are trained to know what is correct and they have the right equipment.
Posted on 6/20/14 at 8:03 am to HubbaBubba
I've never been able to get my tv right. I haven't done it professionally nor am I buying software for it. I just use the eye test but my colors are a little too rich.
Posted on 6/20/14 at 8:07 am to Mr Gardoki
quote:
Do I have to buy a calibration DVD? If so, are they Blu-Ray (don't have Blu-Ray player) or regular DVD? Which one is best and where do I buy it?
quote:
I've never been able to get my tv right. I haven't done it professionally nor am I buying software for it. I just use the eye test but my colors are a little too rich.
If you don't want to spend $20 on that Disney WOW disc, you should try some free self-calibration material like the AVS HD 709 Disc
Main AVSForum thread
This post was edited on 6/20/14 at 8:08 am
Posted on 6/20/14 at 9:53 am to busbeepbeep
quote:
AVS HD 709 Disc
This.
Posted on 6/20/14 at 8:06 pm to nolatiger711
The very best is someone trained to do this. Next best is getting a Spyder color analyzer and learning how to do this yourself. The least effective is trying to calibrate using a DVD program. If you insist on this in order to save money, then try using Digital Video Essentials. It's the best there is for a person not used to doing this.
Posted on 6/20/14 at 9:56 pm to HubbaBubba
Spyders are not considered very good meters. The current go-to meter is the i1 Display Pro AKA i1D3 I think was mentioned earlier. OOTB, it will be worth it, but for best results, being a colorimeter, it would help to profile it against a spectrophotometer, preferably one that has been certified in the last year or two, on the displays you want to calibrate. Spectros are pretty expensive, but the cheaper ones can be rented for $100-$200, and the i1D3 has sealed optics so should drift at a lower rate than cheaper colorimeters, so the profile should last a while. Spectros measure physical properties of the light and are more accurate (though slower), while colorimeters rely on filters and correction tables for different display technologies that never exactly match the specific target displays. Profiling produces a 3x3 matrix that calibration software uses to get the colorimeter results closer to the spectrophotometer. If a pro is using a colorimeter and hasn't profiled it on your display against a spectro, well, I hope you're not paying him very much.
To make it even more confusing, X-Rite makes a device called an i1 Pro, which is a spectrophotometer. It is the i1 Display Pro that is the more affordable colorimeter, but even then it's roughly $225 new and on sale.
To make it even more confusing, X-Rite makes a device called an i1 Pro, which is a spectrophotometer. It is the i1 Display Pro that is the more affordable colorimeter, but even then it's roughly $225 new and on sale.
Posted on 6/20/14 at 10:40 pm to Spock's Eyebrow
True that. No argument. I used to use Sencore, myself. I only considered, for a one-off investment, that a Spyder is cheap enough for the average home consumer, hence my recommendation.
Posted on 6/24/14 at 8:29 am to HubbaBubba
I used tweakTV to set my tv earlier. My tv wasn't in there so I went off models close to it. The colors overall look better. The only issue is that white is not very white anymore. It's like a murky grayed out white.
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