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 |
#22
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair,uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arfa Daily wrote:
wrote in message ... William Sommerwerck wrote: I guess it comes down to definitions and how 'full spectrum' is perceived. Rightly or wrongly, I tend to think of it as a spectrum which contains the same component colours in the same ratios, as natural daylight... That's a reasonable definition for a video display, but it's not sufficient for source lighting. It's difficult to make a "full spectrum" fluorescent lamp, especially one that produces good color rendition for photograpy. but I guess even that varies depending on filtering effects of cloud cover and haze and so on. Even so, I'm sure that there must be some definition of 'average spectrum daylight', and I would expect that any display technology would aim to reproduce any colour in as closely exact a way as it would appear if viewed directly under daylight. The standard is D6500, a 6500K continuous spectrum from a black-body source. What you suggest is, indeed, the intent. TBH I think this is overplaying the significant of daylight. Almost any monitor is adjustable to suit preferences of anything from 5000K to 10,000K, and some go lower. None manke any attempt to copy the colour spectrum of daylight, they merely include the same colour temp as daylight as one of the options. None of the major display types have any ability to copy a daylight spectrum, as they're only RGB displays. NT But take account of the fact that we're talking domestic television sets here, not computer monitors. For the most part, TV sets do not display the same type of content as a computer monitor, and do not include user accessible colour temperature presets or adjustments, which is why I made the point earlier that in general, LCD TVs are set correctly 'out of the box'. As far as overplaying the significance of daylight goes, I'm not sure that I follow what you mean by that. If I look at my garden, and anything or anybody in it, the illumination source will be daylight, and the colours perceived will be directly influenced by that. If I then reproduce that image on any kind of artificial display, and use a different reference for the white, then no other colour will be correct either, which was ever the case when CRTs were set up to give whites which were either too warm or too cold, even by a fraction. Maybe we're talking at cross purposes here, or I'm not understanding something properly, but it seems to me that the colour temperature and CRI of the backlighting on an LCD TV, would be crucially important to correct reproduction of colours. That's exactly correct. The colour temperature of the reference white (ie; the WB) is vitally important for correct colour rendition. The eye will adjust to an incorrect WB, but it will still be incorrect. All I know is, is that the flesh tones were poor on the example that I saw, compared to other LCD TVs which were showing the same picture. The fundamental difference between those sets and the Sammy, was the CCFL vs LED backlighting, so it seems reasonable to draw from that, the inference that the backlighting scheme may well be the cause, no ? It's just as likely that, as you said, a salesbunny wound up the colour control to make the image "look better". Go knows that it's common practice in showrooms. -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
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 |