Home › Forums › Help and Support › Test uncalibrated monitor
- This topic has 30 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 9 months ago by Eric.
-
AuthorPosts
-
2016-02-28 at 2:48 #2038
Hi,
I’ve just got a new monitor and would like to do some tests to see how it performs ‘out of the box’.
Is there a good way to do this with DisplayCAL?
2016-02-28 at 10:40 #2044Hi,
you can test the monitor against several standards on the “Verification” tab by selecting and enabling a simulation profile and enabling “use simulation profile as target profile” as well. I.e. to check against sRGB, choose the “sRGB IEC61966-2.1” profile.
2016-02-28 at 14:22 #2046Ah, perfect – thank you! 🙂
2016-10-21 at 0:00 #4673Hi,
Sorry for the thread revival, rather than starting a new one I thought I’d ask on here.
Is there a way to find out the percentage of the AdobeRGB and sRGB standards that the monitor covers in the measurement report?
Just curious about the color space it offers pre-calibration.
Thanks
2016-10-21 at 12:15 #4675Just do a profile run with a reduced amount of patches (i.e. set the testchart patches slider to the 2nd position from the left = 271 patches). After the profile is created, you can see the gamut coverage percentages. You also may want to skip calibration for this run (on the calibration tab, disable interactive adjustment and set tone curve to “As measured”).
2016-10-22 at 16:33 #4685Thanks Florian 🙂 Exactly what I was looking for.
I’ve calibrated my laptop using Displaycal, which looks great but I’m still a bit unsure whether I’m using the correct instrument mode or correction mode for the display type.
My laptop is an Acer Aspire v Nitro vn7-791g which uses the following display panel – http://www.panelook.com/LP173WF4-SPF1_LG%20Display_17.3_LCM_overview_21056.html
Any recommendations?
Thanks
2016-10-22 at 23:17 #4689The information in the link states it has WLED backlight, so that should be your choice for colorimeter correction.
2016-10-23 at 11:41 #4691Ah thanks 😉 I’ve checked the settings and there’s a ‘LCD (White LED)’ option under Instrument Mode and ‘Spectral: LCD White LED IPS (WLED AC LG SAMSUNG) ‘ option under correction but it’ll only let me select one or the other as they seem to be linked/overwrite each other, which one do you recommend choosing to get the best calibration result?
Thanks
2016-10-23 at 12:41 #4693Oh I see now what is confusing you. I have a i1 display 3, and it lets me select Instrument Mode: LCD(Generic) and the WLED correction. I am assuming you have other instrument.
Which instrument you have?
2016-10-23 at 13:39 #4694I have a Spyder5 from Datacolor. If I select ‘Spectral: LCD White LED IPS (WLED AC LG SAMSUNG)‘ under correction it also changes the instrument mode to ‘LCD (generic)’. Do you think these settings will produce the most accurate calibrated profile for the display?
Also if I follow the steps above and then change the instrument mode back to the ‘LCD (White LED)’ the correction then defaults to ‘none’ leaving me wondering which will give the best results.
Thanks
2016-10-23 at 14:00 #4695For the Spyder5 I would use the respective measurement mode because that’s coming from the instrument firmware. The spectral corrections can be used as well, but they are tailored to the i1 Display Pro/ColorMunki Display, so may not produce the same result.
Calibrite Display Pro HL on Amazon
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.2016-10-23 at 14:17 #4696Maybe this answers your question https://hub.displaycal.net/forums/topic/which-settings/
- This reply was modified 7 years, 6 months ago by MW.
2016-10-23 at 15:10 #4698I’ll run another calibration with these settings. Thanks guys 🙂
2017-06-01 at 10:01 #7304Hello Florian,
I have a NEC PA271W calibrated to emulate sRGB (6504K, 80cd/m2, Gamma 2.2, Native contrast) using Spectraview software. My intention is to get the delta E’s, contrast ratio, and sRGB coverage.
In “relevance” to this thread, I would like to treat this calibration as “out-of-the-box”, but I’m not sure how to proceed since Spectraview also creates an ICC profile and installs it to Windows Color Management. Checking the profile using DisplayCAL’s Profile Info program, at least the tone curves are linear, but I don’t know what else is in the ICC profile which might get ignored once I do the profiling to get the sRGB coverage.
Essentially, my questions are:
- Does DisplayCAL strip away the currently installed ICC profile before starting the profiling process? If so, does that mean there is no way I can get the sRGB coverage of “Spectraview-calibrated NEC PA271W + ICC profile”? But DisplayCAL does seem to detect the ICC profile because it asks whether to “use linear tone curve and embed tone curve in profile”. I tried this anyway and checked both boxes, but profiling results to only a 96.3% sRGB coverage – which is disappointing because one would expect it to be 100% or very close to it.
- When I ran a verification against sRGB IEC61966-2.1 (use simulation profile as target profile checked, unmodified tone curve checked), I am able to get excellent results (mostly green double check marks). Is there a way to compare the Spectraview-generated ICC profile against sRGB IEC61966-2.1? Because if they are identical, then the 96.3% sRGB result is (disappointingly) correct.
Thank you
2017-06-01 at 10:29 #7308Does DisplayCAL strip away the currently installed ICC profile before starting the profiling process?
Any currently active calibration is disabled during calibration and profiling.
If so, does that mean there is no way I can get the sRGB coverage of “Spectraview-calibrated NEC PA271W + ICC profile”?
If the monitor is hardware-calibrated to sRGB via internal 3D LUT, then SpectraView should install an sRGB profile, so sRGB coverage of that profile would of course be 100% when going purely by numbers.
profiling results to only a 96.3% sRGB coverage – which is disappointing because one would expect it to be 100% or very close to it.
If the monitor gamut is already reduced via internal calibration, this sets the limit for the coverage – to get the native sRGB coverage, profile the monitor in widest gamut (native) mode.
-
AuthorPosts