Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#8
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair,uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Arfa Daily" wrote in message
... wrote in message ... Arfa Daily wrote: The LCD only filters light from the backlight. If you don't have a full spectrum white in the first place the you can't expect decent colour. White LEDs aren't quite there yet are they? Archie Absolutely true, except that this particular TV doesn't use white LEDs in its 'revolutionary' backlighting scheme. It uses small RGB arrays, which is why I was questioning whether there was any control over the individual elements in each array, such that the colour temperature of the nominally white light that they produce, could be varied. Which would then, of course, have a corresponding effect on the displayed colour balance. It just seemed to me that given they have gone to the trouble of using RGB arrays, rather than white LEDs, the reason for that might have been to get a full(er) spectrum white. Arfa colour temp can be controlled using the LEDs or the LCD, I'm not sure it makes any big difference which one. RGB LEDs would give the same white as a triphosphor&uv white LED, but with more colour control. The standard 2 colour white LED would be useless on a 3 channel display. And fwiw bichromic white LEDs have huge colour balance variation, way outside of whats acceptable for a display. NT Which is why, given that they've put these LEDs under at least some kind of control in order to implement their (claimed) enhanced black reproduction scheme, that I was questioning whether the scheme maybe allowed for a degree of user intervention under the guise of "tint" or whatever, and which might have accounted for why on this particular TV - the only example that I've seen on and working so far - the flesh tones were so poor compared to Pan and Sony offerings in the same display stack, showing the same picture. I'm trying to get a handle on why a company with the products and reputation of Sammy, are a) using advertising terminology that appears to be questionable in the context that it appears, and b) producing a set, claiming it to be the dog's ******** of display technology, which does not appear - to my eye at least - to be as good as their traditionally CCFL backlit offerings, or those of other manufacturers. I saw the latest all singing and dancing LCD HD Pan, just released, in my friend's shop yesterday. Uses conventional CCFL backlighting. Not as thin as the Sammy, but getting there. Apart from the usual slight gripes that you could direct at any LCD panel when examined closely, the picture was quite stunning, and the colour rendition was as close to 'perfect' as you could reasonably expect. Certainly, flesh tones *appeared* accurate, but I accept that is subjective. Anyway, whichever-whatever, more accurate than they appeared on the LED backlit Sammy ... Arfa The why is pretty clear. Samsung is a whore, like all of the other vendors, only a little more so than some others. They are interested in market share and will create whatever hype they think will help them sell sets. The degree to which it is actually better only has to matter up to the point that too many people figure it out and it hurts sales. As we get better at quantifying why the sets look a little weird on certain colors they will improve the spectrum of the backlighting and improve the color decoding to compensate. It won't happen if people keep spewing the nonsense that all you have to do is hit the primary and secondary colorimetry targets to get perfect color. That is just a starting point, and for some sets that do not have proper color decoding or gamut, may actually be the wrong compromise. Leonard |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Follow-up on What is this? | Electronics Repair | |||
JD-455 fix follow-up | Metalworking | |||
Follow-up | Woodworking | |||
just a follow up | Home Repair |