11/22/2023 0 Comments Aja lut box display cal![]() ![]() And thanks for taking the time to respond. The only thing I could figure is that maybe you can make hardware-calibrated, 14-bit LUTs, but only with Benq software and not load in a LUT made with something like Lightspace/Calman/Displaycal?Īnywho, if you or anyone else has any firsthand experience with that display, I'd be super interested to hear about it. It sounded like two conflicting statements to me, that I'm not sure how to square. And they explicitly said the SW271 does not support loading of external LUTs created with Lightspace. Benq clearly states that it supports hardware calibration via 14-bit LUTs, but I wrote in to the Light Illusion/Lightspace CMS contact form yesterday asking about that monitor and they said that the only two monitors the support the loading of externally created LUTs as of today are the PV270 and SW270C. However, I'm a little confused about the hardware calibration/LUT features. I am putting my 21 lut i did for my resolve, as aja says it read. Have you used the Benq SW271? If so, is it something you'd recommend? I actually have been considering that quite closely as the specs look quite nice and it's squarely in my sub-Flanders budget (~$1500). Have bought an aja lut box, but as i put my lut it tells me that its not a 17. ![]() ![]() In the price range you’re considering I’d actually recommend taking a look at the BenQ SW271 (which is a 10-bit panel and also can store internal calibration LUTs).Īt the moment that BenQ panel seems to hit the sweet spot with features/budget for anyone who isn’t at the point of dropping cash on a Flanders. CUBE 3D LUT formats Configurable on USB via supplied AJA MiniConfig software for Mac and PC 12-bit image processing 16-channel embedded SDI and 8-channel HDMI audio 2-channel RCA analog audio output 5-year Warranty. (And yes, you do actually want full 10-bit). 3D LUT support up to 17x17x17 point, 10/12-bit Supports standard. You need to pony up the cash for the CG248-4K to get 10-bit from Eizo at the moment. Having said all of that, I should point out they neither of those Eizos are actually 10-bit panels (they’re 8-bit + FRC). I’d say based on the use case you described that SDI to HDMI adapter is really just adding another point of failure that you don’t need. It’s been a while since I’ve done but, but I feel like I remember needing to do this for each new project I created in Resolve (and eventually I got around to adding it as the default setting for my project presets) but that was the only issue I ever had with it. I’m not in front of my machine at the moment so you’ll have to dig for the setting, but it’s in the video monitoring settings somewhere. Loading the calibration LUT in Resolve works just fine unless you have multiple client displays that each need their own calibration LUT. That should work in theory, but for your use case it isn’t really necessary. ![]()
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