S E T U P M E N U O P T I O N S
At level 7, the player applies the most aggressive CAR for very low quality video, and adds Motion Adaptive VNR at level 8.
Remember that excessive noise reduction may cause a loss of details. We recommend using the noise reduction function only when you encounter poorly encoded or compressed video that has apparent noise artifacts.
For HDMI 2, the noise reduction level can be set between 0 and +3. The default is level 0. When this level is increased, the player adjusts the picture quality by applying mosquito noise reduction, random noise reduction and MPEG block noise reduction at the same time. The higher the level, the more aggressive noise reduction functions apply.
The following picture adjustment controls are only available for HDMI 1 video output:
8.Color Enhancement: Allows you to adjust the color enhancement level on the video output. This enhances certain colors in the spectrum and enables vivid colors in outdoor scenes without causing hue shifts, loss of detail or changes in skin tones.
9.Contrast Enhancement: Allows you to adjust the contrast enhancement level on the video output. This expands detail in shadows.
HDMI Options
HDMI Options is a
1.Color Space (HDMI 1) – Allows you to select the color space for the HDMI 1 output. The available options are:
ξAuto (recommended) – The player checks with the display device to automatically determine what color space to use. If the display device supports YCbCr 4:4:4, then it will be used to avoid extra color space conversion.
ξRGB Video Level – The HDMI output uses RGB color space and normal signal range suitable for video displays.
ξRGB PC Level – The HDMI output uses RGB color space and expands the signal range. The expanded signal range is suitable for personal computer (PC) displays. Some TVs are designed to be used as a PC monitor, and expect signal in expanded RGB range when the DVI input is selected. For these displays if the video signal uses the normal RGB range, the
ξYCbCr 4:4:4 – The HDMI output uses YCbCr 4:4:4 color space.
ξYCbCr 4:2:2 – The HDMI output uses YCbCr 4:2:2 color space. Generally this is the color space that is closest to the color space encoded on the discs. (All discs are encoded in YCbCr 4:2:0 color space, and the video decoder decodes it into YCbCr 4:2:2.)
2.Color Space (HDMI 2) – Allows you to select the color space for the HDMI 2 output. The available options are the same as those for Color Space (HDMI 1).
3.Deep Color (HDMI 1) – Allows you to select the Deep Color mode for the HDMI 1 output. Deep Color is an option for some TVs or projectors that feature HDMI v1.3 or higher input. Normally, each pixel of the video image is transmitted using
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