Hej. Tänkte höra vilka inställningar ni använder er utav till eran Epson 3200? Jag följde denna guiden http://www.avforums....-guide.1400035/ och tyckte bilden blev alldeles för mörk i Cinema läget. Verkar ju som att ALLA andra fick en wow känsla..
Dela gärna med er av tips och inställningar. Har en Kingpin VFS270 117" ramspänd duk.
Jag har inte läst allt nu itråden men jag använde först dessa inställningar jag hittade (minns ej vart, men har spara detta i ett doc)
Här är den rekomendationen (och sen när jag körde kalibreringskivan så vart det nästa perfekt hos mig!!
I've bought it! What are the best image settings?The Projector has several presets which you can chose by pressing the Colour Mode button on the remote. Their names and recommended uses are as follows:
Colour Modes-Living Room: Very bright and reasonably accurate colour reproduction. Is ideal for daytime use or cases where you for some reason have to turn on a lamp in the room. For a lot of games where cinema tends to be too dark, Living Room can be quite fine even in a darkened room. Black levels are not very good though.
-Natural: By many nicknamed "UNnatural". Basically it's Living Room mode with the colours dialed up to 11 out of 10. Apart from looking horrid the colour balance is also wildly inaccurate with a red level thorugh the roof. This mode has absolutely no use.
-Cinema: Top of the pops. Excellent black level and colour balance. This should be your starting point before you mess around with fine tuning. Not much is needed though since Epson have pretty much nailed it. Some people have made slight adjustments to brightness, contrast and colour tint using calibration discs. What the adjustments should be will depend on your screen and room conditions. The noise of the projector drops dramatically in Cinema mode.
-X.V.colour: On paper this should be the best mode living up to industry standards for correct reproduction of colours. Pretty much everyone agrees that the colours are too flat compared to cinema. Also when in x.v.colour most of the settings for fine tuning the image are disabled so it makes more sense to run in Cinema and fine tune that instead. Black level and noise is the same as Cinema.
To get the best possible black level and contrast, the colour system output by your sources need to match up with the colour system you have chosen on the Projector. Blu-rays and DVDs are encoded with "component" colour space - sometimes calles yPbPr colour space. The opposite is RGB colour space which is used by computers (some graphic cards can output yPbPr) and game consoles. Although movies are encoded as yPbPr there are many players which can output both formats and this has a dramatic effect on image quality if the movie, player and display aren't all using the same colour space as lossy conversion takes place. The settings mentioned below should in theory be just as beneficial for every projector model on the market.
Blu-ray and DVD settings for optimum colour and black level:-On the player, set it to output yPbPr/component. This might also be called HDMI Range limited or normal. If the colour level is shown as 0-256 and 16-235 then 16-235 is the same as yPbPr/component. If there are several settings for yPbPr then yPbPr 4:4:4 is the correct one. Some players (Like the Sony PS3) have both a setting for HDMI Range and for Video Output.
TW3200/TW3600 settings for optimum colour and black level with movies:-In the Signal menu choose Advanced and then HDMI Range. It can be set to either Expanded or normal. Choose HDMI Range Normal.
-In the Image menu set Brightness control to Eco mode. Brightness is thereby lowered a tiny bit and this increases life time of the bulp. Also black level is increased slightly and the fan is less noisy.
-In the Image menu set Auto iris to High Speed: Will unquestionably increase black level slightly in very dark scenes with it's lowering of the light coming through the iris on a scene by scene basis. The downside is a slight noise from the iris when it opens/closes. There are two settings - Normal and High Speed mode. Normal is not recommended as it can't really keep up with very fast cuts between bright and dark scenes. High Speed is almost perfect visually but does make more noise. Like the noise from the projector's fan it is inaudible except during silent scenes in movies. Some don't mind, others do - so you will have to try for yourself to see if you prefer it off or on.
-In the image menu set Colour temperature to 7000k: The default is 6500k and for most projectors this is the best setting. The colour temperature is a bit warmer on the TW3200 than the norm though so several prefer to counter this with either the 7000k or 7500k setting. Black level also benefits slightly from 7000k/7500k.
-In the Gamma menu (pres "Gamma" on the remote) several people have experienced better black level when running with the Gamma 2.3 setting in stead of the default 2.2 setting.
Photos of a TW3200 running in cinema mode and wrong/correct combinations of the above mentioned colour space settings demonstrated:
Epson TW3200/3600 owners threadPhotos of TW3200 with comparisons of Living Room mode/Cinema Mode/x.v.colour comparisons:
Epson TW3200/3600 owners threadOther noteworthy settings:-Epson Super White: This setting is supposed to combat whites which are too bright and blooming. In effect overall brightness is lowered a tiny bit. Should only be used if you think your whites are too bright and lowering of brightness through the normal Brightness setting isn't sufficient. Most people don't use this setting. Is off as default.
-2:2 pulldown: the upsampling of 1080p24 material to 48fps. Reduces judder with 24hz material such as blu-ray movies. Is on as default.
Tillägg: Är att jag har en vit billig duk och har inhandlat ett ND2 filter som jag stark rekomenderar att testa med, detta läggs över linsen på mörka bio kvällar (svärtan blir klart bättre och hela bilden blir behagligare pga minskat ljusflöde)
EDIT:Sorry, såg nu att det visst var dessa inställningar du kört med (vart visst din länk )
Redigerat av MrLelle, 04 juli 2014 - 09:10.