![]() Many other monitors lock even the brightness setting. Unfortunately, this locks many other settings, including the overdrive to "Fast", which produces very noticeable overshoot, specially at low refresh rates. I suppose this is the most accurate method since it's a factory calibration (not a perfect one, but a calibration nonetheless). I do not have a colorimeter nor I intend to get one in the near future, but I discovered there are some ways to achieve it without calibrating the display or creating an ICC profile: When I got my LG 27GL850 (98% DCI-P3 coverage) the first thing I wanted to do was configure it so that it didn't oversaturate the colors, since I want content to be displayed the way it was intended with natural colors. the yellow magenta difference is still there.Īm i doing something wrong or is this just a problem inherent with mismatching computer monitors and the only solution is to just buy a duplicate of the samsung? or does it sound like the samsung is defective and i should simply return it and buy a different monitor?Įdit- i accidentally posted the link for the dell in both the dell and samsung link. these were the settings in the calibration tab and here is the report for the dell, and this is the samsung. this morning i measured the ambient light in my room and it gave me 5825k as the color temperature, so i calibrated both of them to that and this time i recorded the data it gave me, if that's any help. i then went back to displaycal and calibrated the dell to 8k color temperature, and when that was done i filled the dell screen with a pure white image and tried manually tweaking a target white point on the calibration for displaycal on the samsung screen to try to get it to look like the same white that the dell screen was displaying, then i profiled the samsung and they still looked different, and then i tried the reverse matching the dell to the samsung and it was still different. ![]() i calibrated both of them using CIE Illuminant D65 white point, and also i calibrated them with native white point and the difference was still there. i then tried using the xrite i1studio software to make some profiles and it was the same sort of thing. the yellow/green and magenta difference was present there. when i did this, the report said the samsung got 98.3% sRGB gamut coverage and the dell only had 87.2% sRGB. how is anyone supposed to know what a normal amount of yellow looks like vs too much yellow.įirst i tried calibrating the samsung and the dell to 10,000k color temperature. when i first noticed this i looked it up and i read people saying that the monitor is only defective if it's "too yellow", which is so vague that it's useless. i also have an HP24m which looks almost identical to the dell after calibrating, so the samsung is the odd one out. i have tried calibrating them using both the xrite software and displaycal and the results are always similar, it seems my samsung UR2855 always wants to lean toward green and yellow, while my dell U2415 leans magenta by comparison. I am using a colormunki display for the colorimeter.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |