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- Newsgroups: rec.video
- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!ames!nsisrv!kong!joe.gsfc.nasa.gov!jonke
- From: Stephen Jonke <jonke@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Subject: Re: "Trinitone", was Re: XBR^2
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.001722.2090@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- X-Xxmessage-Id: <A73198C12F025C5D@joe.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- X-Xxdate: Thu, 19 Nov 92 00:17:21 GMT
- Sender: news@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov
- Organization: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- X-Useragent: Nuntius v1.1.1d12
- References: <Bxu2Lu.7o@ra.nrl.navy.mil> <lglk2cINNktt@abyssinian.cs.utexas.edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 92 00:17:22 GMT
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <1992Nov17.154940.25565@bnr.ca> Doug Zolmer, dwjz@bnr.ca writes:
- >|> So, is TRINITONE real, or is it a placebo feature?
- >|>
- >
- >I played with the Trinitone adjustment on my friends 4 year old XBR, and
- >I couldn't see any difference.
-
- On my Sony KV27EXR20 the setting of the Trinitrone switch makes a significant
- difference. I forget which is which, but I think the "low" setting makes
- whites pinker in color. Personally I think it's a stupid idea and have left
- it on high (no added pink), but my point is that you can see a difference at
- least on my set. You probably won't notice a difference if looking at a dark
- picture since it effects white, not black.
-
- Steve
- ------------------------
- jonke@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov
- ------------------------
-