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• If you are not sure which video level is correct, leave it at the default setting. Or, if the picture is
excessively dark or very washed out, try changing the HDMI output level to see which one looks
correct
Step 3: Calibrate the black level (brightness) of your display:
• Show the internal video test pattern Black 1-3% (under the OSD menu System and Video Test Patterns)
• Turn the brightness setting of your display down excessively so that the whole screen is black
• Turn the brightness up until you can barely see the difference of the 1%, 2%, and 3% bars
Step 4: Calibrate the white level (contrast or peak white level) of your display:
• Show the internal video test pattern White 97-99%
• Turn the contrast setting of your display up excessively so that you see the whole image as white
• Turn the contrast down until you can barely see the difference between the 97%, 98%, and 99% bars
Step 5: Calibrate the color balance of your display:
• Show the internal video test pattern Cross Gray Steps, and pay attention
to the black bar and white (100 IRE) bar
• Adjust Red, Green, and/or Blue offset/bias settings of your display to fine
tune the color of the black bar if it doesn’t look a neutral black*
• Adjust Red, Green, and/or Blue gain settings of your display to fine tune
the color of white bar if it doesn’t look a neutral white*
*Aim to lower the color you see as dominant rather than increasing the other two
Step 6: Repeat steps 3 to 5 until the brightness and contrast settings don’t need changing,
and the R/G/B offset and R/G/B gain settings of your display are satisfactory.
4.6.3.2 SOURCE VIDEO LEVEL AND COLOR CALIBRATION
Once you have calibrated your display for correct video output levels and color balance, you don’t need to
calibrate your video sources if they also have correct video level and color balance. In practice, however,
most of the video sources will still have some form of problem with video levels or color balance and we
have to calibrate them one by one for perfect results.
To calibrate video sources, we ideally need test patterns originating from the video source. This is
straightforward using readily available specialist calibration DVDs. Many HDTV stations also carry test material
at certain times of the day. In the absence of any specific test material it is difficult to calibrate accurately, as you
can only make the picture look how you expect it should be, so check several discs to gain a good balance.
Please follow the steps below for each video source connected to Crystalio II:
Step 1: Reset Crystalio II’s video settings to the default values:
• Contrast, Brightness (default = 0)
• Red, Green, Blue Offsets and Gains (default = 0)
• Gamma correction (default type Standard, and value = 0)
Step 2: For sources connected to Crystalio II’s HDMI input ports, select the correct input video:
• Press the Menu remote control key to enter OSD (On Screen Display) menu
• Select Input, then Input Port Configuration, and then press the action button.
(If you can’t find this button, select the Advanced Option under System sub-menu and turn
Advanced Option ON first)
• If your source device is equipped with HDMI output, configure Crystalio II’s HDMI input level
as HDMI Standard
• If your source device is a normal consumer AV product, configure Crystalio II’s HDMI output
level as Video Level (16-235)
• If your source device is a PC, configure Crystalio II’s HDMI output level as PC Level (0-255)
• If you are not sure what video level is correct, leave it set at Standard. Or if the picture is excessively
dark or very washed out, try changing the HDMI input level to see which one looks the best