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Avia Disk setup question
hi
I am trying to set up my Mitsubishi 48313 with the Avia Disk. Do i need to have Auto color Correction turned off and perfect color turned on when setting the color/tint and verifing the color with the decoder. Any pointers related and also unrelated would be helpful. thanks |
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hi
After adjusting the color and tint using the Avia disk. the next section is the color decoder section where one has to look thru the blue, green and red filter. Forgive me for asking this dumb question, but what are you supposed to look at. Are you suppose to look at the rest of the screen and compare the rest of the screen to the blue bars and get your results?. I cannot make a comparison whatsoever any pointers etc. Also, after that do you have to go to your color balance and ajust the blue color, or red color etc. For example if red is over 15% to reduce it do you do it in color balance and adust the red color thanks |
david wrote: hi After adjusting the color and tint using the Avia disk. the next section is the color decoder section where one has to look thru the blue, green and red filter. Forgive me for asking this dumb question, but what are you supposed to look at. Are you suppose to look at the rest of the screen and compare the rest of the screen to the blue bars and get your results?. I cannot make a comparison whatsoever any pointers etc. Also, after that do you have to go to your color balance and ajust the blue color, or red color etc. For example if red is over 15% to reduce it do you do it in color balance and adust the red color thanks David: Do not forget to adjust the sharpness too using AVIA.... Typically you want about 60% sharpness... Never 100% !!! Using the blue/red etc filters...... The goal is to adjust so that (usually) one or more of the color boxes disappear while using the color eye filters.... Hope this works out well to improved HD color results!! |
When doing the "color decoder check" you compare the scale of each color
with the intensity of the background (ie. If using the red filter, the background intensity that you see will result exclusively from the red CRT and you compare the brightness with the red scale). If there is too much red (often the case), you decrease your saturation untill you reach 5-10% red. You don't aim for 0% because when you desaturate, you also desaturate the blue and green. After that you readjust you tint using the color bars. You can also attempt to correct your red push by going into the service menu and adjust R, B and GCUTs "david" wrote in message om... hi After adjusting the color and tint using the Avia disk. the next section is the color decoder section where one has to look thru the blue, green and red filter. Forgive me for asking this dumb question, but what are you supposed to look at. Are you suppose to look at the rest of the screen and compare the rest of the screen to the blue bars and get your results?. I cannot make a comparison whatsoever any pointers etc. Also, after that do you have to go to your color balance and ajust the blue color, or red color etc. For example if red is over 15% to reduce it do you do it in color balance and adust the red color thanks |
"Sixtysixzero" wrote in message .. . You can also attempt to correct your red push by going into the service menu and adjust R, B and GCUTs Actually, these are used to adjust the white balance, or gray scale, not the color decoder operation. If you compensate for red push at the level of CRT bias and cutoff you will end up with a black and white pix that has too little red. This has to be done at the color decoder, if possible. Some people attempt to achieve this by attentuating the red difference channel at the component input to the set. Leonard |
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