No viruses, no hardware malfunctions (from my knowledge) but the display issue seems to persist. I updated windows which actually broke even more stuff but I fixed all that garbage. The monitor doesn't show the calibration profile has switched so I have no idea what else to do. Its reproduceable but it seems to only change monitor calibration and not software calibration, every single system driver is updated except for wifi which I dont use. I have reinstalled, rolled back, and switched dch to standard nvidia drivers, changing monitor calibration, nvidia calibration, basically every setting you can think of related to HDR, color, display, everything that doesnt involve changing system files which there should be no reason for that to be necessary. Whats odd is that this seems to get fixed the second I open specifically the windows display settings in control panel. Randomly, a couple weeks ago, my display color started to get very whacked out, where the saturation is seemingly blown out and disrupting color accuracy, which is a very big no no as a digital artist. This reply was modified 5 years, 5 months ago by mds83.I dont exactly know how to explain this, so Ill give it my best shot. I deleted my calibration and reset the monitor to factory default with “user color” selected. This reply was modified 5 years, 5 months ago by Vincent. Set black level “As measured”, same for While level and find a confortable brightness setting (higher that your current settings) This seems to be too much your your display capabilities. Since this Dell S mode seems to be a gamer display I do not find any useful scenarios for a 50cd/m2 target, you should aim for twice this brightness or more.Įdit: It seems that you aimed for a black level of 0.0802cd/m². Reset monitor to factory default values and calibrate again but do not lower brightness so much, do not monify contrast and try to do not lower to much RGB gain control in OSD (if avaliable). Reported Measured luminance: 50.3 cd/m² points to User error. In order to check this set monitor in OSD mode you used for calibration with your calibration OSD configuration (RGB gain, brightness and such) + measure coordinates of WP and CR. When calibrating you change RGB gain, brightness and constrast in a wrong way, loosing to much CR. In order to check this reset monitor to factory config + measure coordinates of WP and CR. In order to check this reset monitor to factory config + measure coordinates of WP. WP correction implies some kind or CR drop, extreme corrections brings bigger CR loss. Native white point too far from daylight 6500K.In order to check this reset monitor to factory config + check contrast ratio (CR) in an uncalibrated OSD mode with native whitepoint (WP) There are many sources of such low contrast ratio:
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