Hi, Thanks for the suggestion.
Thanks and Regards Deepak On Mon, 30 Sep 2002 Warren Young wrote : >Deepak S Kotian wrote: >> >> I have observed the Color quality is a bit less >> rich compared to the orignal source. > >Do you mean that the saturation is low? > >> Can make out easily, when the orignal source and >> kfir decoded output source is seen in seperate >> TVs side by side. >> >> Is there any parameters than can be set to improve >> the quality of the Kfir1 driver. > >I'm not aware of any color calibration controls on the KFir >board. However, the first step would be to calibrate your >"original source" and whatever MPEG playback unit you're using to >each other. Until you do that, you don't know which of the three >devices in your setup to blame, really. > >I recommend that you get either the AVia test DVD (about US$38) >and calibrate your TV first. Then if you're using a PC MPEG >decoder board, rip the test patterns off the disc and use them to >calibrate your board. Ideally now, your decoder board and DVD >player should have identical displays given the same test stream. >(Probably too much to ask, but try to get close.) Now you have a >known source and a known playback device to test the KFir board >against. > >$38 may seem a lot for a DVD, but I've found it very worthwhile. >Having a calibrated TV is a good thing in general, not just for >testing. This disc will also help you set up a surround-sound >speaker set. > >Once you've got everything calibrated as well as you can, you >should still expect some differences in color rendition. It's >just the nature of the beast. >-- = Video articles: http://tangentsoft.net/video/ > > >