Just looked at the manual for ur monitor, u can tell this is not targeted videophiles, it spends most of the pages telling you how to use the backlit leds hahahaha. These things come out very different from the factory, one mode might do something for someone else, but NOT YOU, because the gains are set wrong at the factory. UNLESS those settings work out in the custom mode, or possibly standard mode is already peak. In Most cases, to maximize the contrast ratio, you'll prolly need to go into the dell hidden menu and tug on the rgb gain settings. ![]() Then run the simulation profile testing as below Load up default 2.2 setting from the top menu, go to verification. The custom mode MAY be good, you don't know that for sure, unless you check the other modes as well.Īgain, don't go by what people say online, they either don't have a colorimeter and generally don't understand their device/measurements. Under render intent, you'll want to create 2 different 3dluts, 1 will be the absolute colorimetric w/ whit point scaling, this will bec reated by default,Īfter this process finishes, you'll uncheck "create 3dlut after profiling, then under rendering intent, switch it to preserve Saturation, this will be the second profile you create, you can create it without redoing the whole calibration, it will just use the measurement data from before.įor anime and movies that lack color, you can switch to the preserve saturation profile, because your monitor is default p3 gamut, and it will look more colorful.įor slice of life movies, switch to the absolute colori wwps,ĭon't use the install option for the 3dlut, just go into madvr and do that manually.Įverywhere people say that in Custom mode of the monitor you can reach the rgb channels to manually set them to match the white point. Under 3D lut, leave everything default, EXCEPT, tone curve, select 2.2 relative, then change to 2.4 relative. This won't affect your monitor's profile, this part is only the creation process for 3dlut madvr. ![]() Under calibration, you now select white point 6504 as before, but under tone curve, select default gamma 2.2, then change that to 2.4, This will carve out a 2.4 curve, then use that curve to drive the madvr lut creation. Next select Madvr 709, you stay in the same monitor mode. You can also post the different simulation reports you get, And we can tell you which mode to calibrate.ĪFTER you finish the default 2.2 gamma calibration, install that profile to the monitor and from here on let the dispcal autoloader run, this works way better than all other loaders. Once you figure out which mode you can use, THEN under calibration select 6504k white point, leave tone curve to the 2.2g default, don't touch black point correction or black output offset. Don't worry about the Delta E, this doesn't matter right now.įor Color, Look for a mode that's using its native gamut, so the color dots from the 51 patch should fill out much wider than the bt709 targets, the color overlap the blank circles by a wide margin. if they're all really off, try some of the options in custom. Now run that, what you're looking for between these modes is a relatively flat 2.2gamma, and flat 6500k. Select default gamma 2.2 from the top drop box, go to verification, check simulation profile, check untouched, check bt709, check use simulation profile as monitor profile use the 51 patch checker. To me it seems that the calibration with the correction profiles is far worst than with None.To calibrate that monitor, FIRST, just do test measurements of the few modes it has. With Correction set to Matrix: i1 Display Pro by 4KM v2 ( ): ![]() With Correction set to LCD White LED IPS: ![]() These are the results with various correction profiles: And I am using the extended chart for verification. I have a ColorMunki Display and a Dell S2417DG. I have troubel understanding the results of my calibration with different correction profiles.
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