Close

Member Login

Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

Not a member?

Sign up and join a community that's passionate about exploring the world of entertainment & technology.

Test Bench: NuVision 52LEDLP 52-in 1080p DLP HDTV

Color temperature (Movie Mode/Warm Color Temperature before/after calibration):
20 IRE: 7,596 / 6,513 K
30 IRE: 7,145 / 6,483 K
40 IRE: 6,914 / 6,363 K
50 IRE: 7,166 / 6,461 K
60 IRE: 7,121 / 6,527 K
70 IRE: 7,189 / 6,463 K
80 IRE: 7,218 / 6,478 K
90 IRE: 7,180 / 6,465 K
100 IRE: 7,169 / 6,908 K
Brightness (100-IRE window, before/after): 133 / 113 ftL

Primary Color Point Accuracy vs. SMPTE HD Standard

Color Target X Measured X Target Y Measured Y
Red 0.63 0.634 0.34 0.330
Green 0.31 0.287 0.60 0.568
Blue 0.155 0.149 0.07 0.065

With the 52LEDLP's Movie and Warm color-temperature presets selected, grayscale tracked very tightly across the brightness scale but mostly centered between 7,100 and 7,200 degrees kelvin, well to the blue side of the neutral 6,500-K standard. Individual user menu adjustments for red, green, and blue brought it to within ±140 K from 20 to 90 IRE, though a slight lean toward red at 40 IRE could not be eliminated (only shifted), and re-centering the grayscale around 6,500 K across most of the brightness range introduced a leap toward blue in the full-on 100 IRE window. Still, it remained below 7,000 K, and discounting the minor anomaly at 40 IRE the set tracked just ±66 K from 20 to 90 IRE.

Post-calibration 100-IRE brightness of 113 foot-lamberts, which I arrived at using test patterns followed by subjective viewing of program material, was notably high. Although I lean toward a punchy image generally, this level of light output from a rear projector in a dimly-lit room would normally have me running to clamp down the contrast control. I can only conjecture that the lack of eye fatigue may be attributable in some way to the evenness of the red-green-blue LED light source vs. a traditional white lamp or was perhaps a function of the Nuvision's exceptionally tame reds (see below). But I'm really shooting in the dark here (so to speak).

Post a Comment
(1500 Characters or less)
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use