![]() SpectraCal is touting and is soon to release Studio software which will “automatically” produce 3D LUTs for individual displays. Here is what I know and hopefully this device will eventually become mainstream and/or force prices down on other processors like the Davio: There are two companies, SpectraCal and Light Illusion that I am most interested in at this time. THX is doing it’s own work on the topic but so far nothing exists that can be passed down to us, the CE calibrators. My gut feeling is that 3D LUT technology will soon become part of the work we will all be doing. 3D Look Up Tables have the ability to smooth out most of the faults, and to that end I’ve been dedicating a lot of time to the subject. ![]() I truly enjoy 1D LUT calibrating of displays but as we all have seen there are many faults inside the Rec.709 gamut. All I want is to be able to take a consumer TV or projector and make picture fidelity the best it can be. ![]() You can contact Lumagen directly for more details or if someone want to join the Radiance Pro (Beta) group.As a THXer it is not my goal to be a traveling calibrator nor put food on the table via my certification and abilities. The base unit has two HDMI 2.0 outputs that support 4k60 8-bit 4:2:0. All inputs will support 4k60, 8-bit, 4:2:0. This can be optioned up to eight HDMI 2.0 inputs. You can get back running by replacing one I/O card and not the entire unit. Using I/O cards also helps if you happen to have a power surge that takes out an input or an output. When new HDMI chip versions come on line you will be able to purchase HDMI upgrade cards rather than needing to buy a new unit. Inputs and outputs are on dual-input, or dual-output, daughter cards. So there is an upgrade path for RadiancePro Beta owners to be able to upgrade to 18 GHz. The 18 GHz chips should be available to Lumagen later this year and they plan to do a input and output module for the Radiance Pro for this. The chips Lumagen currently buying support up to 4k60, 8-bit, 4:2:0, which equates to 9 GHz. This will allow Lumagen to provide updates when Silicon Image provides a new release and should help to eliminate compatibility issues. The new HDMI 2.0 chips are from Silicon Image and have an internal microprocessor with reprogrammable flash memory. ![]() Update from Lumagen Radiance Pro UHD Video Processor:Īll inputs and outputs will be HDMI 2.0 with HDCP 2.2. LG feature internally, nothing more, same type of CMS calibration controls but with more precision steps (0.1 step of tweaking per each control value while the TV's have 1 step).ĭVDO iScan DUO has 1D LUT (Grayscale+Gamma) and very limited CMS, only a global Saturation and Hue(Tint) control, you can separately control 1-Point per Primary+Secondary Colors like VideoEQ.ĮeColor is a a true 3D-LUT Table Device (with six memories of 65-Point Cube Correction Table) and that makes it the device with the largest 3D-LUT Table Memory with 65圆5圆5 (274.625 Color Points) with HDMI In-Out available. VideoEQ has exactly the same controls (In CMS area) like the ones that TV Sets from Panasonic, Samsung. this is not 3D LUT, this is called 6-Axis 1-Point CMS, means 6 Colors in total for the whole CMS table, so you can move these 6 only color points in 3D Space, not to calibrate multiple points per axis, like eeColor (65-Point), Lumagen Radiance (5-Point), Lumagen Radiance 2xxx (9-Point) or Lumagen Radiance 21xx (17-Point). VideoEQ has only one point of controls at it's CMS, 1 for R-G-B-C-M-Y. VideoEQ or VideoMX or DVDO iScan DUO are not 3D LUT capable devices. list of the available hardware solutions. There is a 3D Cube Resolution Comparison Guide for the users to visualize the difference of calibrated color points precision over various cube resolution sizes between all available hardware solutions of pro industry & consumer market.Īlso there is a 3D LUT Boxes / Video Processors Comparison table page with the complete spec. Hello, eeColor has been measured by 2 professional calibrators ( here & here), both have post AVSForum that with eeColor in/out of the video signal chain it has no measured difference, zero input lag (0ms). ![]()
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