BEST CRT/FLAT EXTERNAL MONITOR, FOR PERFECT VIDEO PLAYBACK
I have been looking for the best CRT Monitor to playback while editing and color correcting in FC Studio and AE Adobe. I am not sure if I should buy one of the new flat ones, I just feel like the CRT's have a much better quality when color correcting. What do you think or recommend.
I will be using it to playback DV and HD content at 720p and some times 1080p. This Tv/Monitor will be use for my clients to view their product in post production before delivering it, it's very important that the quality looks as real as possible or perfect. Anyone who owns one, please post.
You've asked a real mixed question, so I'll give you a mixed answer.
For HD color correction, you will have to spend at least $15,000 for an acceptable HD LCD. For an HD CRT, the price point is way, way above that.
CRTs are going the way of the dinosaur - The EU has banned lead in all electronic gear, which means CRTs cannot be sold in any EU nation. There are only a few CRTs still being sold, and an acceptable HD CRT can run into the mid five figures.
i'll give you another mixed answer; there is no perfect monitor due to the fact that no one sees the same as others.
currently, i'm looking at five sony bvm monitors all with the same image which is from one of my 6 sony bvp 900 cameras. like every morning before a show, i throw up bars and run through the calibration on all the monitors. like every freaken crt out there, there are subtle differences in all of these five bvm monitors. bvm's are very expensive and they don't all look the same. why? power supplies, tube age, yoke differences, who knows, it's a crapshoot.
lcd monitors are horrible, they make my eyes hurt and when i walk into the shading area of a production facility and see lcd's, i just know at the end of the day my eyes are going to hurt. i don't feel the color rendition of an lcd is as accurate as that of crt. currently, leitch is making a brand new lcd waveform/vectorscope. it's so horrible that reading tea leaves to measure my video signals would probably be more accurate and pleasureable.
but take this with the subjectiveness with which it's meant. in the truck next door, there are two video guys looking at ikegami monitors and they'll have completely differing opinions than myself as they see differently than i do.
you can't expect anyone else to make this choice for you. vision is like hearing and only you can make the decision of what's best for you.
just my two cents from a production truck outside a wet wrigley field hoping the baseball game is called today so's i can go home and away from these baseball fans.......
I have diplopia, double-vision. When I first got hit with it about 9 or 10 years ago, while I was waiting for the lab to make my lenses so I could go out in the world again, I would sit in my Barcalounger about 20 feet away from my TV at home, and try to watch the screen.
Now try to imagine seeing two different screens, one with your left eye, the other with your right eye. They are offset enough from one another that you can see two complete screens, side-by-side.
OK, now here's the interesting thing: Since I am trained to notice subtle differences in video screens, I found myself seeing these two side-by-side images of the same screen, and one looks more green than the other, while the other looks more red than the one.
From what my optometrist told me, most people have the same color perception difference between one eye and the other. I'd love to set up a controlled test of this for high-level colorists to see if their eyes have similar perception differences.
Well, I thought it was interesting.
EDIT: This is not an easy thing to do, compare the vision from one eye with that from the other. You have to use your mind to consciously swap your dominant eye without losing the perception of both screens at the same time. It's very tricky.
Not only didn't you mention your budget for this purchase, you also failed to mention what size monitor you were looking for. Since its going to be used for presentation to clients, I'll assume you want something larger than 20". Sony's BVM-A24E1WU at $22,499.95 is pretty good, or go for the larger 32" BVM-A36E1WU at $36,999.95.
For a good listing of what's available, go to www.bhphoto.com then click on the Professional Video link, then Monitors, then Presentation monitors.
now i really have a headache, thinking about that double-vision. i would more insane than i am now; double vision baseball, hockey, sports junk........
I am looking at spending between $1200 and $3500 so far Sony CRT's are the one's I like the most. Well, another thing I will like is maybe a good flat Screen tv in the studio for clients to look at while editing. So, is there a difference between the flat screens I see at best buy, and the one's I see in hollywood studios for movie making.