I'm slightly drunk so please don't judge me if I sound a bit too harsh, but it really got on my last nerve. I'm still open to any ingenious solutions if anyone has found out. In the end, don't get me wrong, I'm a graphic designer, so I know a thing or two about the coloring, this is why I'm so pissed off about this product. I wonder what solution Datacolor support will suggest (if any at all). I will definitely post the possible solutions for the unfortunate ones who bought the Spyders. I will try to do some experiments with calibrations in the complete darkness and with glass removed to see what works. I opened a ticket about my problem on their Support but after reading some feedbacks I don't really expect it to be answered, as it seems Datacolor really doesn't give a $-hit about their customers. I wish I could afford a better device, but in this price range I can't find anything better I guess.Īll in all, I'm pretty disappointed with Datacolor consumer products – you pay a fairly large sum of money for this tiny device that claims to make the colors right on your display and it fails pretty miserably. I'm not 100% satisfied with Spyder but I guess it works "acceptably" after some tinkering with it. I found the majority of reviews to be positive, thats why I bought it in the first place, and I really can't afford to buy yet another colorimeter, sorry.
If you guys are interested, I will post the results.Ĭlick to expand.Too late for that, I already bought Spyder. I'm planning to remove the glass soon for cleaning anyway, so I'll do this test while I'm at it. The ultimate test to confirm this would be to run a calibration with iMac glass on and then with glass removed (making sure the ambient light conditions and the settings are identical). I tried calibrating another monitor with no glass (framed matte screen, no air gap) calibrated like a charm. On top of that, the glass is lifted from the LCD so there is a small air gap between them another theory but couldn't that gap cause micro reflections and mess up the colorimeter reading too? Both times the Ambient Light measuring was off.Ĭould it be that iMac's glass messes up the Spyder sensors readings? The glass edges pick up the ambient light and this light is traveling through the entire glass (just try to point a flashlight to the side of your iMac and look on the opposite side you'll see the light passes right through. Then I tried calibrating at night in a COMPLETE darkness and it worked! The settings were: Gamma: 2.2, White Point: 6500K, Brightness: LCD (120). Initially I calibrated in a shaded room with very little ambient light, the results were as I've mentioned in my previous post. I don't know if it was just a coincidence, but it worked pretty good.
Yes, using 5800K White Point made it better, but still not quite right. I'm just so pissed off that I paid $200 to make my display worse than it was before. ColorSync) interprets the newly created profile wrong or something. White Point: 6500K (5000K/5800K/6500K/Native)īrightness: LCD (CRT/LCD/Native) Ĭould it be that the problem lies somewhere outside the Spyder4Pro? I noticed the image suddenly changes to "cool" at the very last step of the calibration, so I'm wondering maybe some other software (e.g. Gamut: Normal Gamut (Unknown/Normal Gamut/Wide Gamut)īacklight: White LED (Unknown/Fluorescent CCFL/White LED/RGB LED) I get pretty noticeable "cooling" (blue/violet) tinge over the image after calibration, I'm pretty confident with what I see because even grayscale photos have the tinge, and the solid grays are not neutral.Īnyone with Spyder4Pro had similar problems and know any workarounds? Maybe some specific settings should be used? My calibration settings were (available options in brackets): I tried calibrating several times with different settings and I still can't get the colors right. The problem is, it does more harm than good. I bought a Datacolor Spyder4Pro today for calibrating the screen of my iMac 21.5" (mid-2010).