| ||||||||||||||||||||||
| ![]() | ![]() | |||||||
| Home Theater Projectors Looking for some calibration gearDiscuss Looking for some calibration gear in the Home Theater | Audio and Video forum; Looking for some calibration gear Gray scale is the starting point for good color, no doubt. Brightness and contrast can be tweaked without a meter. ... |
|
|
Views: 1520 - Replies: 26
| Thread Tools |
| | #26 | ||||
| Re: Looking for some calibration gear Gray scale is the starting point for good color, no doubt. Brightness and contrast can be tweaked without a meter. Gamma is tough to get right if you have adjustments for it, without measurements. Note that we have now begun moving vendors to the new pull down option at the top of the forum pages. You will find it between "Shack Shopping" and "Glossary". This will represent a great improvement in the vendor reference database, making it easier than ever to find what you are looking for. Contact me with any suggested entries, category recommendations, or additional information about the vendors that we have. If you are a vendor and want your company listed, there is an option to provide us with the information. | ||||
|
| | |
| | |
| | #27 | ||||
| Re: Looking for some calibration gear I fully agree... It was tough to get my gamma right, but there are few tricks to get it right, and above all, the display has to be a good one with some flexibility as well. What I meant, I believe the greyscale, gamma....and everything related to black and white was what truly made the picture look much better.... at least to my eyes. Colour accuracy is important but comes second IMO. ASME AI Yamaha RX-V2500, Wharfedale Diamond 9.6 Fronts, Wharfedale Diamond CM Center, Diamond DFS Surround and rear, Behringer FBQ 2496, Dual RL-P18s 625L LLTs, Dual TA-2400 Pro (2 * 2000 W Amp), Samsung HD870 DVD player, Carada BW 16:9 106" screen, Epson TW-2000, 60 Gb PS3 Important HT proverbs: - "You can never have too much headroom" (talking about bass) - "you can never have too big a screen" (talking about still pictures) Projector selection basics Epson TW 2000 review | ||||
|