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#1
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I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes
that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Bill |
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#3
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BILL wrote:
I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Bill Low black levels have been a major weakness of LCD TVs. In the past several years, the higher end models have made major strides in reducing black crush and lowering the minimum black level, but this is still trickling down to the lower end models. The LCDs still trail the plasmas from Pioneer, Panasonic, and Samsung in this aspect. Does your RCA screen look grey or whitish on black scenes? Does it look like it is glowing when you are off axis for black backgrounds? Probably not that much you can do about it without getting a new HD TV, but you might want to try a calibration DVD such as "Digital Video Essentials" which is $17 at amazon. The DVD is also useful for calibrating your sound system. Won't totally fix your problem, but may make it not as bad. Alan F |
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#4
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#5
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Try turning up the brightness and turning down the contrast. -dickm I went to a friends house that has a new Spectre Komodo 42" LCD flat screen TV. He was showing it off to us, when I noticed the black was way too black. I immediately went to the video menu and turned the brightness up and tweaked the contrast. He had no idea how to do that. They thought it was more "automatic". It was much improved IMHO. dan |
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#6
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"BILL" wrote in message ... I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Bill I walked past a display of LCD sets at Circuit City recently, and was amazed that there was no meaningful difference beween high end and low end set - until. When they had a scene where half of the picture was in good light, and the other half dark the low end sets showed no detail in the dark. The Sony was best, followed by a Sharp, and some LG and some Samsung sets. The other Samsung, and LG sets were as putrid as the Westinghouse and other bargain brands. Tam |
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#7
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 18:46:48 -0400, BILL wrote:
I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Adjust brightness and contrast to suit you. You may want to lower the color if it's oversaturated. All the sets I've ever used put out way too much color for my taste at default. Lowering the amount of color will sharpen the image also. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
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#8
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:09:00 -0400, Tam/WB2TT wrote:
"BILL" wrote in message ... I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Bill I walked past a display of LCD sets at Circuit City recently, and was amazed that there was no meaningful difference beween high end and low end set - until. When they had a scene where half of the picture was in good light, and the other half dark the low end sets showed no detail in the dark. The Sony was best, followed by a Sharp, and some LG and some Samsung sets. The other Samsung, and LG sets were as putrid as the Westinghouse and other bargain brands. That's more adjustments than anything else. It wouldn't surprise me if they adjusted them like that to sell the more expensive sets. They've been doing this for years. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
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#9
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"Wes Newell" wrote in message news:[email protected] On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:09:00 -0400, Tam/WB2TT wrote: "BILL" wrote in message ... I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? I have tried the black expand thing, the color and contrast. I have heard that LCD sets have this problem but hell sometimes you can"t even tell whats going on it is so bad. Thanks in advance for any info. Bill I walked past a display of LCD sets at Circuit City recently, and was amazed that there was no meaningful difference beween high end and low end set - until. When they had a scene where half of the picture was in good light, and the other half dark the low end sets showed no detail in the dark. The Sony was best, followed by a Sharp, and some LG and some Samsung sets. The other Samsung, and LG sets were as putrid as the Westinghouse and other bargain brands. That's more adjustments than anything else. It wouldn't surprise me if they adjusted them like that to sell the more expensive sets. They've been doing this for years. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm The other thing is that some movies are simply shot that way. To me, the Batman and Matrix movies, for instance, are too dark in a theatre. They probably save money on set designs that way. Tam |
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#10
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 18:40:17 -0500, dicko
wrote: On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 18:46:48 -0400, (BILL) wrote: I have an LCD hdtv 32" RCA. Is there anyway you can lighten up scenes that take place at night? ... Try turning up the brightness and turning down the contrast. That's what I did, with my Sony LCD TV. I was watching the original Star Wars and I noticed how the sand creatures' robes were pretty much just a dark mass with no detail. I turned the brightness up (and the contrast down) and I could suddenly see the folds in the robes pretty clearly. I was now watching a dusk scene rather than a night scene... And I had less contrast! The picture was less striking. I think it might be a trade-off, a decision each person makes: Would you rather have a scene be a little more striking and visually impressive, or would you rather see all sorts of details (that for all I know the director didn't even intend you to see)? I heard that Spielberg took a look at how his Jaws opening scene looked on DVD, (perhpas on a TV with the brightness turned up?) and said something like "I didn't realize we were making a porno movie." For now, despite the director's original intentions, the viewer could clearly see the naked body of the woman that had been hidden in shadows in the theater. My choice was simple: If I'm sure that a shot has a bunch of detail that is being lost in a mass of black, I turn the brightness up (and the contrast down, if needed). |
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