vi posto la risposta che mi aveva dato l'asssistenza della Klein quando avevo chiesto informazioni sulla calibrazione dei plasma,magari può essere utile:
"Plasma is difficult.
Warm up is important. We give 20 minutes.
AND..
Most plasma screens have current limiting, so when a full field is displayed, it is dimmer than if a patch is displayed.
We use a patch that is 25% of the screen area to take measurements. It could be some larger, but smaller than that seems not to matter.
ALSO..
Plasma phosphors can wear out, so most plasma will gradually go dimmer over a minute or so after a patch is put up to increase screen life. If you put the K10 up to the screen, and log the brightness of a patch over a few minutes you can test for this. To overcome this, we take a reading pretty quickly after a brightness change, and we use the same delay for red, green and blue measurements.
AND..
For power reduction requirements of EnergyStar, the plasmas are also timed to dim after a few minutes.
AND..
over the first 300 hours of plasma life, the brightness is changing.. it dims.. most calibrators will require at least 100 hours of plasma burn-in before calibration.
Not all plasma screens handle these issues in the same way."
"Plasma is difficult.
Warm up is important. We give 20 minutes.
AND..
Most plasma screens have current limiting, so when a full field is displayed, it is dimmer than if a patch is displayed.
We use a patch that is 25% of the screen area to take measurements. It could be some larger, but smaller than that seems not to matter.
ALSO..
Plasma phosphors can wear out, so most plasma will gradually go dimmer over a minute or so after a patch is put up to increase screen life. If you put the K10 up to the screen, and log the brightness of a patch over a few minutes you can test for this. To overcome this, we take a reading pretty quickly after a brightness change, and we use the same delay for red, green and blue measurements.
AND..
For power reduction requirements of EnergyStar, the plasmas are also timed to dim after a few minutes.
AND..
over the first 300 hours of plasma life, the brightness is changing.. it dims.. most calibrators will require at least 100 hours of plasma burn-in before calibration.
Not all plasma screens handle these issues in the same way."