If you're seeing black crush that's due to your own display. There is no black crush on my display.
You are incorrect. You can clearly see the black crush with photoshop.
If you're seeing black crush that's due to your own display. There is no black crush on my display.
If you're seeing black crush that's due to your own display. There is no black crush on my display.
thank you.You are incorrect. You can clearly see the black crush with photoshop.
If you're seeing black crush that's due to your own display. There is no black crush on my display.
yeah, if only you would have a display like this.
I'm always very skeptical in threads like these. I don't trust other peopls eyes or judgement.
But in the end, go what pleases YOUR eyes most.
Damn, the problem is the screenshot comparisons weren't exact frame comparisons and thus the lighting differs slightly. That's why people think there's black crush.
Damn, the problem is the screenshot comparisons weren't exact frame comparisons and thus the lighting differs slightly. That's why people think there's black crush.
Download the video file and see for yourself how it's supposed to look. http://www.mediafire.com/?eb41884bc06em4o
Just download and see for yourself. It's only 7MB. My initial screenshot comparison was flawed since it was not a direct frame comparison in a scene with varying lighting.You don't believe the histogram?
Just download and see for yourself. It's only 7MB. My initial screenshot comparison was flawed since it was not a direct frame comparison in a scene with varying lighting.
Edit: Apparently there is no function to go to a specific frame in VLC like there is in MPC-HC.
Yea, I reran the AVS calibration tests and yuv->rgb conversion disabled is definitely the correct one and does not crush blacks.You are not crushing blacks (or white) there or losing information. Even in those pics.
You'd have to run a black bar scale test to know.