Dummass question on video settings

NeilGabriel
NeilGabriel Posts: 1,487
I assumed that my BDP-83 would allow video settings for color, hue, brightness....but if it does, I cannot find them on the menu. Is this all to be set on the HDTV?

I also had asked about brightness....maybe I watch too many dark movies. Although many movies seem dark (and scenes often are in dark settings), TV comes through bright and clear...I have played with pic mode and general keep it in the middle between pro and vivid...

I am estimating that the bulb has 7000 hours....give or take a 1,000...I have ordered a new bulb....

ng
Post edited by NeilGabriel on

Comments

  • Knucklehead
    Knucklehead Posts: 3,602
    edited October 2010
    My Lg BDP doesn't have color settings either, cant really complain about the pic though.
    Polk Audio Surround Bar 360
    Mirage PS-12
    LG BDP-550
    Motorola HD FIOS DVR
    Panasonic 42" Plasma
    XBOX 360[/SIZE]

    Office stuff

    Allied 395 receiver
    Pioneer CDP PD-M430
    RT8t's & Wharfedale Diamond II's[/SIZE]

    Life is one grand, sweet song, so start the music. ~Ronald Reagan
  • messiah
    messiah Posts: 1,790
    edited October 2010
    Yep, it's adjustable thru the player. Page 52 in the manual.

    http://www.oppodigital.com/Download/BDP83/BDP-83_English_Manual.pdf
    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    Benjamin Franklin, February 17th, 1775.

    "The day that I have to give up my constitutional rights AND let some dude rub my junk...well, let's just say that it's gonna be a real bad day for the dude trying to rub my junk!!"
    messiah, November 23rd, 2010
  • steveinaz
    steveinaz Posts: 19,538
    edited October 2010
    Neil, the general consensus is that it's best to set these adjustments on the display. The caveat would be a certain adjustment can't be made to an acceptable level, that can be tweaked at the player. I'd leave the player specific settings at the default.

    Do you have a DVE calibration disc? It should be the FIRST accessory you buy for your HDTV.
    Source: Bluesound Node 2i - Preamp/DAC: Benchmark DAC2 DX - Amp: Parasound Halo A21 - Speakers: MartinLogan Motion 60XTi - Shop Rig: Yamaha A-S501 Integrated - Shop Spkrs: Elac Debut 2.0 B5.2
  • spock 2054
    spock 2054 Posts: 163
    edited October 2010
    steveinaz wrote: »
    Neil, the general consensus is that it's best to set these adjustments on the display. The caveat would be a certain adjustment can't be made to an acceptable level, that can be tweaked at the player. I'd leave the player specific settings at the default.

    Do you have a DVE calibration disc? It should be the FIRST accessory you buy for your HDTV.

    I thought the oppo had the Spears and Munsil disc packed with the player..
    polk monitor 70's
    center - polk monitor cs2
    surround - polk monitor 60's
    surround back - jbl e10
    sub - velodyne dps 12
    sub - polk psw110
    avr/pre-amp - onkyo tx-nr809
    amp - adcom gfa-5500
    amp - carver av405
    display - sharp lc70le847u
    tv - silicon dust hd homern
    blu-ray - oppo bdp-103
    hd dvd- toshiba hd xa2
    control - logitech harmony one
    turntable - technics sl1500 mkII
  • steveinaz
    steveinaz Posts: 19,538
    edited October 2010
    That'll work too....

    You might want to do some research to see which mode has the most accurate color temp for your particular model. On most Samsung DLP's, "Movie" is the best choice to get closest to 6500 k. To some people, 6500k looks too red/orange, but IT IS the standard. It's usually because higher temp (bluer push) gives the illusion of a sharper picture, so most sets are shipped in a cooler temp mode w/super high contrast ("torch" mode). While "torch" mode has a definite wow factor, it's grossly inaccurate to the actual scene color temps.
    Source: Bluesound Node 2i - Preamp/DAC: Benchmark DAC2 DX - Amp: Parasound Halo A21 - Speakers: MartinLogan Motion 60XTi - Shop Rig: Yamaha A-S501 Integrated - Shop Spkrs: Elac Debut 2.0 B5.2
  • spock 2054
    spock 2054 Posts: 163
    edited October 2010
    steveinaz wrote: »
    That'll work too....

    You might want to do some research to see which mode has the most accurate color temp for your particular model. On most Samsung DLP's, "Movie" is the best choice to get closest to 6500 k. To some people, 6500k looks too red/orange, but IT IS the standard. It's usually because higher temp (bluer push) gives the illusion of a sharper picture, so most sets are shipped in a cooler temp mode w/super high contrast ("torch" mode). While "torch" mode has a definite wow factor, it's grossly inaccurate to the actual scene color temps.

    +1 on the torch mode effect. Stop into any Best Buy and scan the flat panels. I need sunglasses and a lead suit when looking at their television displays. Plasma panels look so dark next to the led/lcd units. At least in a couple of Magnolia locations here in Pittsburgh, the sets looks sort of calibrated...

    I finally dialed in my sets contrast and black levels with the Spears & Munsil HD Benchmark Blu-ray edition. Used the AVS HD disc from AVS forum for the color bars. It looked good before, but now it looks fantastic.
    polk monitor 70's
    center - polk monitor cs2
    surround - polk monitor 60's
    surround back - jbl e10
    sub - velodyne dps 12
    sub - polk psw110
    avr/pre-amp - onkyo tx-nr809
    amp - adcom gfa-5500
    amp - carver av405
    display - sharp lc70le847u
    tv - silicon dust hd homern
    blu-ray - oppo bdp-103
    hd dvd- toshiba hd xa2
    control - logitech harmony one
    turntable - technics sl1500 mkII