-
, , , , , , , , , ,
-
Spielt gerade: GT7 | 60fps FTW
Immer noch Probleme mit RGB-Leveln:
Are Xbox One's RGB Settings Broken?
Are Xbox One's RGB Settings Broken?
So I've been running some black level tests on my Xbox One using this site in order to establish whether Full RGB is working properly.
With my Xbox One and my TV both set to 'Limited RGB' (16-235), I can only see 20+ range, i.e. crushed blacks.
Similarly, with my Xbox One and my TV both set to 'Full RGB' (0-255), I can only see the same 20+ range, i.e. crushed blacks.
Now normally I'd put this down to a screwed up TV calibration or something. But, if I plug my PS4 in using the same HDMI input and cable, everything works as it should on both Limited and Full RGB – and all the squares appear with both scenarios. Also, when using the pre-installed calibration app on Xbox One, their own black level test works as expected on both Limited and Full RGB, showing every single tile. However, the background changes colour slightly when the app is launched, suggesting to me something fishy is going on.
Anyone else had similar issues?
With my Xbox One and my TV both set to 'Limited RGB' (16-235), I can only see 20+ range, i.e. crushed blacks.
Similarly, with my Xbox One and my TV both set to 'Full RGB' (0-255), I can only see the same 20+ range, i.e. crushed blacks.
Now normally I'd put this down to a screwed up TV calibration or something. But, if I plug my PS4 in using the same HDMI input and cable, everything works as it should on both Limited and Full RGB – and all the squares appear with both scenarios. Also, when using the pre-installed calibration app on Xbox One, their own black level test works as expected on both Limited and Full RGB, showing every single tile. However, the background changes colour slightly when the app is launched, suggesting to me something fishy is going on.
Anyone else had similar issues?
Yup output is fucked. Especially full rgb. Limited is broken too because while it is 16-235 the EDID info still shows that signal info is 0-255. This means that if you are using a TV with an auto setting for RGB levels (such as the Panasonic 60 series) the picture will be washed out because the TV expects 0-255.
That explains it. I have the same TV. How do I get the EDID info? Weirdly though, forcing the TV to limited doesn't remedy the issue.
Zuletzt editiert: