Audio/video menu, continued – MITSUBISHI ELECTRIC WD-62530 User Manual

Page 55

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Chapter 4. TV Menu Settings

55

Audio/Video Menu, continued

◊ Contrast (Bright/Natural/Brilliant): Provides a slider

to adjust the white-to-black level. Low contrast
shows a variety of shades in darker images, while high
contrast shows darker images more uniformly black
and makes colors appear more vibrant. In most home
lighting situations, a medium contrast looks best.
High contrast is good for brightly lit environments.

◊ Brightness (Bright/Natural/Brilliant): Provides a slider

to adjust the overall brightness of the picture

.

◊ Color: Provides a slider to adjust color intensity.

◊ Tint: Provides a slider to adjust the red-to-green ratio.

◊ Sharpness: Provides a slider to adjust the detail and

clarity.

◊ Color Temperature (Bright/Natural/Brilliant): Allows

you to adjust how white is displayed.

Low: White images have a warm cast. This

adjustment is an average and can vary due to
ambient room lighting, video scene brightness,
and the TV’s age. Natural/Color Temp at the
low setting displays video at the 6500K industry
standard for NTSC pictures.

High: White images have a cool cast. This

setting may provide the most realistic picture
under bright lighting.

◊ PerfectColor™ (WD-52531, WD-62531) Lets you

adjust the intensity of any or all of six colors (Magenta,
Red, Yellow, Green, Cyan and Blue) to create color
balance for the current image source. PerfectColor
settings are memorized for each TV input or device.
Select the

PerfectColor option and press ENTER to

open the adjustment screen.

Note: PerfectColor is not availble for the WD-52530

model.
Individual sliders for each color are displayed.
Highlighted text shows which slider you are adjusting.
Press

CANCEL while in the PerfectColor screen to reset

all colors to the default settings.

Name of affected

input

Figure 14. Set PerfectColor adjustments independently
for each TV input.

◊ Video Noise: Reduces minor noise (graininess) in

the picture. Use the

Low setting with good-quality

signals. Use

High with poor-quality signals. Turn off

to leave the picture unaltered.

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