is there a certain blu-ray settings on playstation 3 ps3 for a 40 inch samsung

  • Thread starter Thread starter bubbafin
  • Start date Start date
B

bubbafin

Guest
is it pulgged in? not having a plugged in can rrrrllly mess with the image qulatiy.

u might need to conncet 2 the inernet 2 downlode better movie settins.

maybe u should tinker with the videooptions.
 
lcd lnt4066f to get rid of bad? ok I have a samsung 40 inch LCD lnt4066f and when I. Connect my ps3 with the blu ray player n watch a blu ray I get bad pixelation or fuzzy image on dark images but bright images look amazing and are crystal clear I called the samsung tech and they said either I have a bad hdmi or I have to call Sony and find out a special. Settings for the blu ray I orderd a brand new. Monster m1000 hdmi. Cable but I really don't think thats gonna help. Please help pirates of the caribbean looks so horrible and pixelated on my LCD
oIc course its plugged in who would write that and I set up my hdmi settings already its set to auto everything and its at 1080p
okkk i tried putting it to full and putting it on superwhite but it didnt help... then i played with the settings on my tv where i have 3 display options of dynamic, standard , and movie i put it on movie and made it a lil brighter and sharper and put it from warm2 to normal and but a lil more color in there that helped alot you can barely see ne pixelation but i lost alot of color and contrast and sharpness
 
Did you configure the HDMI connection on the PS3 first using the A/V cables? As the following link outlines, "If you wish to use the HDMI capabilities of the PlayStation®3, you must first setup the system using the included A/V cables. Follow the steps below to configure HDMI settings on the users PlayStation®3 system."
 
In the blu-ray or display settings on your XMB, there is a toggle for a color-related setting. I don't remember exactly what it is called, but its two settings are I think "limited" and "full." The default is limited, because not all TV's can handle full. Try to switch it to "full" and see if it will work. If your TV can handle it, all the light pollution in dark scenes will disappear. When I first noticed it and switched it on, it was like I had a whole new TV, it makes a big difference.

If the light scenes are working, it's not likely the HDMI cable. Don't waste any more money on expensive HDMI cables.

OK, here it is: RGB full range, in the display settings.

You should also check video output format in the BD settings, for HDMI there are two choices, RGB and Y/Pb/Pr (component-type). It depends on the TV. If it's set to automatic, it should auto-detect and work, you could trial and error setting it to both settings too.

The other setting that might matter is super-white, if your TV has it. In the display settings.
 
Back
Top