Buy Lowest Price Colorvision STV100 Spyder TV Colormeter Reviews & Sales

Colorvision STV100 Spyder TV Colormeter

414RMV73TPL. SL160  Buy Lowest Price Colorvision STV100 Spyder TV Colormeter Reviews & Sales

  • Scientifically measures contrast, brightness, color, tint, and color temperature presets on your TV
  • Helps you make adjustments to dramatically improve your picture quality
  • Easy to use, intuitive interface
  • Comprehensive help screens guide you through each step to achieve your desired color setting
  • Supports Plasma, RPTV, DLP, LCD and CRT TVs.

The Datacolor SpyderTV colorimeter and software deliver an easy-to-use solution for optimizing any TV for a better viewing experience. SpyderTV scientifically measures contrast, brightness, color, tint, and color temperature presets on your TV and helps you make the necessary adjustments to dramatically improve your picture quality. SpyderTV supports Plasma, RPTV, DLP, LCD and CRT TVs.Make sure your TV produces the same bright, vibrant picture at home as it does in the store showroom with the C

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List Price: $ 219.99

Price: $ 219.99

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  1. 17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Make Sure You’re Smarter Than The TV, February 24, 2008
    By 
    Peter M. Perry
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Colorvision STV100 Spyder TV Colormeter (CD-ROM)

    I bought this puppy a few days ago and have run it a few times to get a feel for the calibration qualities of the Sensor.

    Now let me say that I’ve tried it in a room with only modest light as well as a room with no other Ambient Light Source and both proved to be identical values so as long as it isn’t broad daylight with the blinds open it is pretty reliable.

    Let me add that the device is a Colorimeter which is for calibrating color and it is actually very good at it! Much better than you could eyeball regardless of who you are.

    So with all that said, let’s address some of the complaints, or should I say misconceptions with the device.

    1st, all the Device knows are absolutes that are pre-programmed into the software and it is designed to achieve accuracy within a certain degree (often lower than .05% Deviation) and your eyes will never be that accurate.

    2nd, Skin Tones Change based on the light source used and unfortunately Hollywood knows that the lighting creates atmosphere so the skin tones will never be 100% reliable in any movie; So let’s take the movie “The Guardian” for example this movie had no less than 7 different light sources depending on the scene and this would make calibrating your screen based on skin tones as tough a target as trying to pinpoint a Democrats Morals (After all, truth is relative right?). In Reality Skin tones can only truly be used to judge Calibration based on a Daylight Scene and ONLY if You Know the Skin Tone To Begin With.

    So if you’re going to judge the devices capabilities then you should use known quantities to judge. Good sources are Whites Lines, Known Black Items and Blue Skies or use a modern Animated Feature like Finding Nemo or Shrek where light temperature is never really a factor.

    Now as for Brightness and Contrast, these characteristics are designed to work within a defined range as well and the Colorimeter is doing what it’s told to do…

    Basically, the software measures the top value and the bottom value for each setting and then takes a few calculated readings from in between to determine range while setting the appropriate mid-point for Range. Keep in Mind, that isn’t arbitrary and as such the device will not know if part of a scene is too dark, it is just trying to keep everything operating within a certain range without letting parts of the scene get blown out (the more range your TV has the better this will work but at 700:1 or 1500:1 it will require some user intervention).

    My advice for setting up a TV, that is less than 2000:1 contrast ratio, with the SpyderTV is to go through the whole setup and then tweak the brightness and contrast with a THX Video Test from a Pixar Disk like Finding Nemo or using DVE for these settings.

    So, with all that said this device is every bit as accurate as higher priced calibration tools but does require a little bit of knowledge to operate properly within spec.

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  2. 8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Not worth the money, May 22, 2007
    By 
    M. Jacobson (Melbourne, FL United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Colorvision STV100 Spyder TV Colormeter (CD-ROM)

    Used on Sony Bravia LCD and got same results as factory default settings except for tint which was badly biased to red. Managed to get a better picture using trial and error (by varying things like backllight and sharpness which are not evaluated by spydertv). Tech support is a joke. Don’t waste your money!

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