From TV to Player

By William Van Winkle, published on July 1, 2009
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: , , | Themes: Home Theater, Display Panels and Monitors

6. From TV to Player

JS: Have you seen that some DVD players have their own brightness and contrast controls?

TG: I hadn’t noticed, no.

JS: Okay, they’re in the better ones. You set the TV with the generator and then use the disc to calibrate the DVD player. At consumer prices, you can be sure that DVD players are inconsistent with each other. Some of them have adjustments, some don’t. So if my calibrators are picking the gear, we always pick a DVD player with adjustments. We were just in Seattle working on a system that included a well designed Blue-ray player. Brightness was off by three clicks low and contrast was three clicks high. It took two minutes to calibrate the Blu-Ray player, but I only knew it was off because I had previously used a $4,000 generator set up to the TV. Once the TV was correct, I put in the—we call it the Jenny disc because of our artist. The white buttons on her shirt had blown out, and you couldn’t see the difference between the shirt and the jacket. I knew the TV was right because I did it with the generator. So you go to the Blu-ray, play with a couple of buttons on brightness, couple of buttons on contrast, and we’re done in two seconds. What we have to have in the field for our calibrators is something in our hands that we know is right, and, unfortunately, that’s an expensive tool. Test pattern generators generally start around four grand. But without that, you have no point of reference. Still, if someone’s tweaking with the $30 disc and they get the DVD player to look in the ballpark, you didn’t lose white detail, you didn’t lose black detail, and the picture’s much better. Is it the same as a guy with $10,000 worth of test gear? No. There is so much more you can do, but you can do the basics for $30.

TG: I’d probably be happy with it.

JS: A significant percentage of the people who buy the disc are happy with the disc. A small percentage of the people want to know what else they can do, so they call one of my calibrators. It’s rare that I go to a house to do a calibration and not find a test disc in the house where the guy wanted to do it himself. Perfectionists, though, they want it all.

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Comments

JWL3 07/02/2009 12:33 PM
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Great article. Finally, a calibration article that speaks to the common display user using common English.

DarkMantle 07/02/2009 2:15 AM
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Damn man, another great article from you. You are one of the best writer on Tom's. Very informative long articles everytime, but never boring.

Flying Sq 07/02/2009 3:46 AM
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Amazing article, this was perfect timing as I am buying a plasma in a few days.

michaelahess 07/02/2009 3:56 AM
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zodiacfml 07/02/2009 7:32 AM
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now that explains the brightness of my 19" LCD over the replaced 19" CRT, even at sRGB setting.
just recently, i played with that calibration program in Windows7. it was good enough and allowed me to reduce the red level slightly on my sRGB mode LCD.

anyways, what a good article including the interviewed expert! i learned essentials and reminded of the basics in a short time.

dennisburke 07/02/2009 6:26 PM
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Too bad the article did not include Samsung's recently introduced OLED TV's. Is an OLED TV a better option than a plasma?

Anonymous 07/02/2009 8:10 PM
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very good article...
theres a bit about OLED if you read carefully

ironic77 07/02/2009 9:12 PM
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Yes, and Samsung is still working on their first production samples.

What I don't get about this article is the comments about Media Center. I know several people with 4-6 tuners (I only need 3 tuners myself), including OCUR and HD, and now with support for MP4 and Netflix, Media Center is better than ever.

michaelahess 07/03/2009 12:28 PM
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Negatives for mentioning Noel Lee? Do you people not know about him? Biggest thief in the industry. Educate before discriminate.

NeoDude007 07/03/2009 1:12 AM
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michaelahess :
Negatives for mentioning Noel Lee? Do you people not know about him? Biggest thief in the industry. Educate before discriminate.


The way in which he was mentioned had nothing to do with his products besides his name being associated with them... Why don't you tell us your issue with him if you are so loving of education? Hmmmm? He was just mentioned, that is all... get a life

redgarl 07/03/2009 1:16 AM
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720p to 1080p not a worthy upgrade... >:/

Okay, we know here that a tech is nothing more than a monkey with a certificate trying to sell is salad...

Play Crysis on a 720p resolution, and move to 1080p... you will see the difference at 15 feet of distance easily...

Anonymous 07/03/2009 2:27 AM
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dude....we are talking about TV here...not playing a pc game.

bin1127 07/03/2009 9:29 AM
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Great article. Reading what a calibrator has to say about tvs is much more meaningful than some unknown reviewer paid by x brand.

I think getting the right rgb is really overlooked nowadays. If I go to bestbuy and look at their setup I'd ask them where's the CRTs.

williamvw 07/03/2009 10:29 AM
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bin1127 :
Great article. Reading what a calibrator has to say about tvs is much more meaningful than some unknown reviewer paid by x brand. I think getting the right rgb is really overlooked nowadays. If I go to bestbuy and look at their setup I'd ask them where's the CRTs.



Thank you (all of you above, actually) for the compliment. I'm glad you enjoyed the piece.

In all fairness, though, while I suspect a few reviewers in this business are bought, most are not. I've been reviewing products for print and Web since 1998, and not once has a vendor ever offered to pay me for a favorable review. Far more likely is that we reviewers learn over time which vendors are easier to work with. When a vendor is willing to provide skilled tech support, a reviewer's guide, a *working* eval unit, and so on -- and does so repeatedly and reliably over the years -- you can't help but appreciate their efforts. That doesn't, or at least shouldn't, mean they get get a favorable review if the product doesn't merit it. It merely means that when we have to pick five products from a field of 50, reviewers are more likely to make their first phone calls to companies that will make the job of reviewing less troublesome. Try doing a roundup of 10 motherboards with pre-release BIOSes someday and you'll see what I mean. ;-)

Admittedly, you did say "unknown" reviewer...but I'm pretty sure this group (which would be all of us save for maybe a handful of names like Walt Mossberg) would be even less likely to be bribed. Why pay someone that nobody reads?

Anonymous 07/03/2009 3:56 PM
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Is ISF calibration only for high end displays? How does the average consumer go about getting thier TV (LCD or Plasma) professionally calibrated? Call Best Buy's Geek Squad?

williamvw 07/03/2009 7:00 PM
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Tom Z :
Is ISF calibration only for high end displays? How does the average consumer go about getting thier TV (LCD or Plasma) professionally calibrated? Call Best Buy's Geek Squad?


Try this link: http://www.imagingscience.com/isf-trained.cfm

michaelahess 07/04/2009 4:07 AM
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NeoDude007 :
The way in which he was mentioned had nothing to do with his products besides his name being associated with them... Why don't you tell us your issue with him if you are so loving of education? Hmmmm? He was just mentioned, that is all... get a life



My issue with him is Monster, if you don't know about their problems, too damn bad for you, keep shopping at Radio Shack, Best Buy, etc and enjoy getting raped!

michaelahess 07/04/2009 4:10 AM
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And if you mean the gentleman that is the subject of the article, I loose all faith in him for having thiefs as friends.

lowguppy 07/06/2009 9:46 PM
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michaelahess :
And if you mean the gentleman that is the subject of the article, I loose all faith in him for having thiefs as friends.


That's such a total non sequitor to the article though...

Its really hard to shop for an HDTV right now. There aren't many quantifiable specs you can rely on, so you really need to see them to tell how good they look, but then the TVs on display are mis-calibrated and shown in brightly lit showrooms. I somehow doubt Best Buy would have one of the Geek squad calibrate a TV on the sales floor if I asked. There are good reviews out there, but there are so many displays on the market that its just impossible to find a well written review on all of them. Its especially hard if you're looking for value out of a mainstream set that just needs to be calibrated right.

williamvw 07/06/2009 10:02 PM
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michaelahess :
And if you mean the gentleman that is the subject of the article, I loose all faith in him for having thiefs as friends.


He never said they were friends, nor did he endorse Monster Cable or Noel Lee personally. Clearly, you have an axe to grind on the subject, which is fine although totally out of context given the nature and purpose of this interview. If you could find a forum more appropriate for your views, such as one specifically about Monster Cable, then backing your views with credible, objective sources would no doubt be more persuasive than unsubstantiated accusations. Name-calling doesn't really accomplish anything...unless you're in grade school. If you and Noel were in third grade together, I know he'd be very hurt right now.


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