(4)-W-LED PFS phosphor for “Multimedia monitors” (P3 gamut, like some HDR/pseudo-HDR LED TVs or iMacs). Get them from HP Z32x calibration software.Īuto / i1d3 bundle has these corrections: (2)-W-LED PFS phosphor for “photography monitor (AdobeRGB)” subtype. Get some broken/emulated gamut versions from community powered Displaycal colorimeter correction database (it’s not Displa圜ALs fault: users who made them do that process in the wrong way, they do not take a native gamut backlight reading) It’s the mode one where I can pick LCD (Generic) or Refresh (Generic) and then there are Correction sections where I can pick Auto or a specific option.Īuto downloaded / i1d3 bundle lacks of two corrections from that (my) list: Hi Vincent, thank you for such a thorough response! I just noticed that there are two sections I’m concerned about. This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by Vincent. That would lead to mild to huge color cast in while and it depends on your particular colorimeter unit (not model). If you use “WLED” (sRGB WLED) correction with an i1d3 device then all wavelengths were your i1d3 is not close to standard observer will mangify the differences between your widegamut display and a sRGB WLED “normal monitor”. If you own a Spyder4/5 then bundled correction should be called widegamut led or “RGB led” or something like that and they are more limited in number and accuracy than xrite pack. SW271 is likely to use last one in its “photo” flavor. “Photo” monitors with near 97-99-100% of AbobeRGB should use a correction bundled in HP Z32x software (you’ll have to download it, get EDR and convert to CCSS, then uninstall). Multimedia (P3 displays without almost full AdobeRGB coverage) can use “Panasonic Vxxxxx” bundled correction.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |