I just put these settings on my 55 c1 and it looks pretty good, my warm set to 42. Warm 50 turns to a dirty green and that's with any mode without these settings
What a load of bollocks your just putting some settings into your TV. Calibration requires thousands of pounds of equipment. Also every TV is different (manufacturers tolerance) and every home is different so those settings could actually make u picture worse.
Whilst I agree with your sentiment that the TVs are all different and therefore need to be calibrated independently, it doesn't require 'thousands of pounds of equipment'. If you're serious about doing it at home yourself, the colorimeter and (easiest) software to use will set you back about £300. There is, however very good free software out there that will do just as good a job, albeit with you adjusting all of the settings individually, playing around with the White balance etc, and it's a much steeper curve in learning to use it...at least it was; I haven't used it in around 3 years.
This are the settings the color calibrator corrected? Or should i use this settings before calibrating. By the way i am searching some tutorial for how to setup tv before calibration. Thanks if you know the answer. @Csan
I found the color of grass on sports to look slightly bluish out of the box when compared to to Sony OLEDs. Is that just a matter of changing the color temperature to warm or would it require an individual color adjustment?
@@CoachCSan Please do! The SDR settings are amazing, thanks for sharing your knowledge, cannot wait for HDR and DV Btw what is your opinion between this LGC1 and the 2020 Sony A9S? I haven’t read an opinion from a professional such as yourself. Thanks
@@arpegius2621 hey, after checking the calibration of the C1 for HDR/DV, the core base calibration of Rec.709 translate very good for them and stays in the calibration parameters. So basically they do not need any further adjustments. Only thing would be that when palting an HDR/DV content, go straight to the picture settings at Filmakers mode and raise the brightness to 52. Basi ally just 2 levels up and that's it. Enjoy!
Since the REC709 was calibrated, the HDR settings translated well enough for not warranting an adjustment video, meaning that in HDR, the settings are very minor to make a video for it. 🙂
For gaming it would have to be adjusted because the color settings are not entirely available. I haven’t been able to release the settings for gaming yet.
@@CoachCSan I use a 48" one of these for PC gaming. I find myself adjusting settings all of the time for the brightness levels depending on the game. The picture,/colour, is fantastic though. Even the sound is among the best I've heard from a 'flat screen' tv in this price range.
Sorry but this guy didn't explain correctly. He switched between many screens without saying anything and lost me. Someone should explain every move ,this guy didn't 👎🏼
I see you’re back at it! Wish I had one of these monsters to put your settings in.
I would like to see your setting for HDR and gaming
5:38 Great tips! Thank you because I just fell in love with my tv again!!
Can't wait for HDR and Dolby vision settings
I just put these settings on my 55 c1 and it looks pretty good, my warm set to 42. Warm 50 turns to a dirty green and that's with any mode without these settings
Thank you so much from Europe, i hope to see the HDR settings soon 😀
What about for Dolby Atmos mode? I always find the picture too dim unless I turn Auto Dynamic Contrast to High 🤦♂️
What has Dolby Atmos got to do with your dim picture. Atmos is a sound format nothing to do with picture 🤣
I misspoke. I meant Dolby Vision
@@andrewhoward139 👍
What’s the video after the settings? Found on youtube?
What a load of bollocks your just putting some settings into your TV.
Calibration requires thousands of pounds of equipment.
Also every TV is different (manufacturers tolerance) and every home is different so those settings could actually make u picture worse.
True and the TV might explode if you try them also. I mean it's not like if whites look off you could reset the white balance or anything.
Whilst I agree with your sentiment that the TVs are all different and therefore need to be calibrated independently, it doesn't require 'thousands of pounds of equipment'.
If you're serious about doing it at home yourself, the colorimeter and (easiest) software to use will set you back about £300. There is, however very good free software out there that will do just as good a job, albeit with you adjusting all of the settings individually, playing around with the White balance etc, and it's a much steeper curve in learning to use it...at least it was; I haven't used it in around 3 years.
This are the settings the color calibrator corrected? Or should i use this settings before calibrating. By the way i am searching some tutorial for how to setup tv before calibration. Thanks if you know the answer. @Csan
Can these settings be used on any picture mode?
@guillermososa9816 nope, some picture setting won't allow to copy or even change most settings. But the gaming 1 and 2 does the job very well.
Will these settings work on filmmaker mode?
Should these settings be applied to all
Just put these in my c2 lol, looks pretty good thanks for the vid 👍
I found the color of grass on sports to look slightly bluish out of the box when compared to to Sony OLEDs. Is that just a matter of changing the color temperature to warm or would it require an individual color adjustment?
yes try warm 50 , it’ll take time to get used to but it’ll look better imo
What is an alto
For hdr i need different settings in color?
No
No need, adjustments are very minor.
Are u going to be doing an hdr and dolby vision calibration video
I do plan to do so.
@@CoachCSan Please do! The SDR settings are amazing, thanks for sharing your knowledge, cannot wait for HDR and DV
Btw what is your opinion between this LGC1 and the 2020 Sony A9S? I haven’t read an opinion from a professional such as yourself.
Thanks
@@arpegius2621 hey, after checking the calibration of the C1 for HDR/DV, the core base calibration of Rec.709 translate very good for them and stays in the calibration parameters. So basically they do not need any further adjustments. Only thing would be that when palting an HDR/DV content, go straight to the picture settings at Filmakers mode and raise the brightness to 52. Basi ally just 2 levels up and that's it. Enjoy!
You forgot cyan, magenta and yellow settings. And when the calib for the HDR :(
Since the REC709 was calibrated, the HDR settings translated well enough for not warranting an adjustment video, meaning that in HDR, the settings are very minor to make a video for it. 🙂
@@CoachCSan perfect so I can add the same settings for HDR right?
@XRGB Gaming no,, don't change them, It's already good.
@@CoachCSan thanks man
Thank you very much my tv looks great 👍
These settings are for HDR or sdr?
SDR
I look forward to the settings for HDR😄😄👍🙏
Please Lg c1 settings for game
HGIG
Warm 45-50
PC Mode
Color 55
Gamebar select RPG
Use boost mode
@@o_KingOfKings_o beaaaast mode!!!!
Hello why is there no video for hdr?
Not yet sorry
Thank you 👍👍👍
HDR SETTINGS ?🖐
Would this work for gaming mode or only expert bright space?
For gaming it would have to be adjusted because the color settings are not entirely available. I haven’t been able to release the settings for gaming yet.
@@CoachCSan I use a 48" one of these for PC gaming. I find myself adjusting settings all of the time for the brightness levels depending on the game. The picture,/colour, is fantastic though. Even the sound is among the best I've heard from a 'flat screen' tv in this price range.
lol dude u could of saved 5 minutes by just saying 10 point adust only 40 percent instead of going thru 10 to 100 with all o o o
Sorry but this guy didn't explain correctly. He switched between many screens without saying anything and lost me. Someone should explain every move ,this guy didn't 👎🏼
🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️
You speak pretty good English... So why in the world did you pronounce the word "auto" all funky and fucked up like that.