thegladiator
Active member
Ricordavo bene che la THX3D utilizza "alto". Tratto dalla review di hdtvtest dello ZT:
We cleaned up greyscale performance in 3-D by selecting the [Professional1] mode (which saves different settings independently in both 2D and 3D), and then adjusting the [Panel Luminance Setting] to “High” (which is what the THX3D Cinema mode also uses internally). This decreases gradation quality a little and increases noise, but unlike the 2D display mode, does not cause visible highlight clipping. It also, as the name suggests, offers higher brightness, which we feel is a big deal in 3D. From our point of view, the extra-dimensional image on a plasma-based 3DTV is a little noisy anyway, so a bit more in exchange for higher brightness is not going to hurt (much).
We then found what the most neutrally-coloured starting point was. Actually, since the excess of red was sizeable, selecting [Colour Temperature] of “Normal” (which tints the picture coming out of the TV blue-ish) resulted in a more accurate starting point when summed with the greeny-red tint of the glasses.
A questo punto non mi spiego come si possa raddrizzare quel gamma senza pesanti interventi sui comandi...
David dice di essere partito da "normal" come temperatura colore, ci posso anche provare (io sono partito da warm) ma non credo proprio che ciò abbia effetto sul gamma...
A meno che la sonda, per qualche strana ragione di flickering/refresh/altro, con pannello su alto non rilevi in modo errato la luminanza...
We cleaned up greyscale performance in 3-D by selecting the [Professional1] mode (which saves different settings independently in both 2D and 3D), and then adjusting the [Panel Luminance Setting] to “High” (which is what the THX3D Cinema mode also uses internally). This decreases gradation quality a little and increases noise, but unlike the 2D display mode, does not cause visible highlight clipping. It also, as the name suggests, offers higher brightness, which we feel is a big deal in 3D. From our point of view, the extra-dimensional image on a plasma-based 3DTV is a little noisy anyway, so a bit more in exchange for higher brightness is not going to hurt (much).
We then found what the most neutrally-coloured starting point was. Actually, since the excess of red was sizeable, selecting [Colour Temperature] of “Normal” (which tints the picture coming out of the TV blue-ish) resulted in a more accurate starting point when summed with the greeny-red tint of the glasses.
A questo punto non mi spiego come si possa raddrizzare quel gamma senza pesanti interventi sui comandi...
David dice di essere partito da "normal" come temperatura colore, ci posso anche provare (io sono partito da warm) ma non credo proprio che ciò abbia effetto sul gamma...
A meno che la sonda, per qualche strana ragione di flickering/refresh/altro, con pannello su alto non rilevi in modo errato la luminanza...
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