Thread: Field Monitor Recommendation

Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14
  1. #1 Field Monitor Recommendation 
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    1,046
    Hi Guys

    Is there any production field monitor that you can recomended ? Somewhere around 17"-19" would be ideal and not larger than that, it will be too bulky and heavy. And also 9" small monitor.

    Any ideas ?
    Reply With Quote  
     

  2. #2  
    cross-examiner Emanuel A.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    2,260
    Here is:

    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthread.php?t=5170


    Quote Originally Posted by siniarch View Post
    Hi guys. I've been on DVXuser for a little bit now, and I have been posting about this project of mine. Someone at DVXuser suggested that I post this here also. I just don't know why it never occured to me. But here it is.

    Ok Guys,

    So after 9-12 months of trying to put this thing together and being ignored, stalled, and manhandled by the LCD industry, I'm finally proud to mention that I've pretty much finished my LCD. (really wished I would have been able to get this thing out sooner)

    Here are the specs.

    LCD Panel:

    Features:
    High resolution
    Ultra-wide viewing angle
    High contrast
    Wide color gamut
    LVDS interface


    General Specifications:

    Display area........................170.5mm (6.69") W x 127.9mm (5.06")
    Diagonal Size .....................213mm (8.4")
    Display Color.......................16,777,213 colors
    Pixels..................................1024 (h) x 786 (v)
    Contrast ratio......................500:1 (typ.)
    Viewing Angle......................Horizontal 85°R, 85°L. Vertical 85°T, 85°D.
    Polarizer Surface.............Antiglare
    Luminance.....................350 cd/m²
    (this is the panel with the regular inverter. I have a more powerful inverter, but no way of testing the actual brightness. Its definitely higher than 350 though)
    Backlight........................Edge light type: 4 cold cathode fluo.
    Controller Board:
    Power....................................12v
    Video Inputs..........................ARGB, DVI-D, Composite Video, S-Video, HD-Component (YPbPr), HD-SDI (optional w/1 or 2 channels)

    HD-COMPONENT PORT :
    Mode Resolution

    480p/60 720x483
    576p/50 720x576
    720p/60 1280x720
    720p/23.89 1280x720
    720p/24 1280x720
    720p/25 1280x720
    720p/29.97 1280x720
    720p/30 1280x720
    1035i/30 1920x1035
    1080i/50 1920x1080
    1080i/50 1920x1080
    1080i/29 1920x1080
    1080i/30 1920x1080
    1080p/25 1920x1080
    1080p/30 1920x1080

    COMPOSITE, S-VIDEO
    System Resolution

    NTSC 720x480
    NTSC 4.43 720x480
    PAL 720x576
    PAL M 720x576
    SECAM 720x576


    Picture in Picture
    Flip Horizontal, Flip Vertical, Rotate
    Picture: Brightness, Contrast, Saturation, Hue, Sharpness
    Aspect Size: 4:3, 16:9, 16:10, 2.35:1, 2:1, 1:1
    Custom sizing: Under-scan, Normal, Custom (you kind of can zoom in on w/ this setting)
    Blue Only (not sure if you can calibrate with this option, but its in the menu)
    Auto Picture, Auto Color (I set my bars from the camera and this calibrate the monitor pretty well. Really like this feature)
    Gama: 1.0/1.6/2.2

    OSD: position and time to remain on screen, transparency (for menu)
    Color temperatures: 5000k, 6500k, 8000k, 9300k, User
    Monochrome Mode: color, red mono, green mono, blue mono.

    Physical Box: (revision: almost forgot to post this)
    size ......................8.5" wide x 6.625" tall x 2.5" deep
    weight...................3.2 lbs with the (1) HD-SDI option
    The good thing about this is the image. Its really superb. The next best thing is the Angle of viewing. I really haven't seen anything with that much angle of view. Which is good for when more than one person are relying on the LCD.

    Here are the first pictures. Please comment and ask questions if you would like.
    Note the RGB connectors on top will be BNC and not RCA as those shown. I will fix this. I also need to add stickers to label things or possible do silk screened white letters.

    Thank you.

    Luis Sinibaldi
    RED ONE @home
    Donald Duck #111
    Emanuel & Co's RED ONE
    Scrooge McDuck
    #647

    RED ZOOM LENSES
    #156
    #157

    RED 300mm LENS
    #82
    Who am I?
    LINK
    Reply With Quote  
     

  3. #3  
    Senior Member Emery Wells's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    666
    Im looking into the Sony Luma series:

    http://bssc.sel.sony.com/Broadcastan...l_lcd_monitors
    Emery Wells @emerywells @KatabaticNY
    Founder/CTO - Katabatic Digital
    KataData iPhone Data Rate Calculator
    http://katabatic.tv
    NYC EPIC Rentals + Scratch DI/Transcoding
    emery [at] katabatic [dot] tv
    Reply With Quote  
     

  4. #4  
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    1,046
    Sony Luma series looks very interesting. Thanks for the link

    Thanks for small monitor info emanuel.

    Regards
    Reply With Quote  
     

  5. #5  
    Personnaly I think best field monitor are the CineTals, quite expensive but lots of options.

    If you use the field monitor for checking focus, I would recommend at very least 23''

    antoine.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  6. #6  
    Senior Member Carlo Rho's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Madrid
    Posts
    214
    I'm looking for ecinema new series, they're brand new FX23 looks like a good solution for field use but I'm still looking for list price. Someone has this info?
    Ciao
    ILL Cámaras
    Madrid/Milano/Gran Canaria
    RED Epic-Xs (x2) & Scarlet-X #0055
    RED One, #783-MX w/SSD
    QtakeHDx2
    Optimos DP 16-42&30-80 3D ready
    Leica Summilux-C coming home next month
    Reply With Quote  
     

  7. #7  
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    1,046
    Cinetal is reserve for online station. Not worth it for field monitor.

    Or just used HDLink or any IO box and plug to HDMI or DVI based LCD. But i think i need at least an option so i can check over/under scan, blue channel checking and some others.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  8. #8  
    Rivai, I don't agree with you. IMO Cinetal is for field while BVM-L are for studio.

    antoine.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  9. #9  
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    1,046
    Maybe our opinion is different then. But hey, it's ok

    Our Cinetal is sitting just fine in our online suite

    peace
    Reply With Quote  
     

  10. #10  
    Sure Cinetal is fine for online, but it has option very usefull for on set, like bundle with Speedgrade on Set, exposure mode to see where you are burning the high or losing details in the dark, it has also network connection for sending or receiving LUT or reference frame from the studio, etc...

    And I don't think BVM-L has these usefull option for on set. That's why I think Cinetal is good for on set.

    antoine.

    and love
    Reply With Quote  
     

Posting Permissions
  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts