Which 4k monitor to get
- KVRian
- 513 posts since 22 Sep, 2015
I'm sure I've told you which ones I believe to be the best for a monitor about 2-3 times already.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 6081 posts since 27 Jul, 2001 from Tarpon Springs, Florida, USA
I hope that I am not the only benefiting from your experience and recommendations.wickfut wrote:I'm sure I've told you which ones I believe to be the best for a monitor about 2-3 times already.
The way I see it you recommended Samsung KU6xx0 40" and 43" which may be in my price range. Hope I did not miss any others.
Samsung - 40" Class (40" Diag.) - LED - 2160p - Smart - 4K Ultra HD TV – Black
Model: UN40KU6300FXZA currently $500
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/samsung-40- ... o1I75FyXqQ
I will stick with your recommendations and wait for a sale.
Did you calibrate your monitor? Just asking out of curiosity.
My Studio: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7760&p=7777146#p7777146
- KVRian
- 513 posts since 22 Sep, 2015
Have you searched any of the TVs for reviews, or searched with other keywords like "as pc monitor" or "gaming tv" etc?
If you do, and you should, you'll find that near every review site highly rates the current samsungs for a pc monitor until you hit the LG OLED price range.
re: calibration. don't see the point of paying some guy to come in and set your tv to reference levels. Your eyes adjust to different brightness, contrasts and colours anyway and the calibration would need the room to have the exact same sunlight levels in to remain accurate. Also, seems a bit of a waste when I only use Cubase and the odd game of Dark Souls/Division and net browsing whatever.
If you do, and you should, you'll find that near every review site highly rates the current samsungs for a pc monitor until you hit the LG OLED price range.
re: calibration. don't see the point of paying some guy to come in and set your tv to reference levels. Your eyes adjust to different brightness, contrasts and colours anyway and the calibration would need the room to have the exact same sunlight levels in to remain accurate. Also, seems a bit of a waste when I only use Cubase and the odd game of Dark Souls/Division and net browsing whatever.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 6081 posts since 27 Jul, 2001 from Tarpon Springs, Florida, USA
wickfut wrote:Have you searched any of the TVs for reviews, or searched with other keywords like "as pc monitor" or "gaming tv" etc?
If you do, and you should, you'll find that near every review site highly rates the current samsungs for a pc monitor until you hit the LG OLED price range.
re: calibration. don't see the point of paying some guy to come in and set your tv to reference levels. Your eyes adjust to different brightness, contrasts and colours anyway and the calibration would need the room to have the exact same sunlight levels in to remain accurate. Also, seems a bit of a waste when I only use Cubase and the odd game of Dark Souls/Division and net browsing whatever.
I have spent many hours doing research online. Started with what is 4k? So I have come a long way in part to your effort. Did not notice that "every review site highly rates the current samsungs for a pc monitor" so thanks for pointing this out. Now that I have learned a few things the reviews are beginning to make more sense.
For audio work calibrating the monitor makes little if any sense. I was asking mostly for my Photoshop work. What I will do is what I did before. Since I am primarily concerned about the printed image, is to print a few images and see what I get.
My Studio: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7760&p=7777146#p7777146
- KVRAF
- 1724 posts since 31 Dec, 2004 from betwixt
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 6081 posts since 27 Jul, 2001 from Tarpon Springs, Florida, USA
Regarding HDMI cable:
https://hardforum.com/threads/2015-sams ... e.1869675/
I should get 18 Gbps HDMI cable.
I need 12 feet long. Get this:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/12FT-ULTRA-HD-2 ... xykVNRsOBs
Or use the current 5 year old cable and see how well it does.
https://hardforum.com/threads/2015-sams ... e.1869675/
I should get 18 Gbps HDMI cable.
I need 12 feet long. Get this:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/12FT-ULTRA-HD-2 ... xykVNRsOBs
Or use the current 5 year old cable and see how well it does.
My Studio: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7760&p=7777146#p7777146
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 6081 posts since 27 Jul, 2001 from Tarpon Springs, Florida, USA
I could only find two Samsung 4k TV's that fit the "KU6xx0"wickfut wrote:Samsung KU6xx0 do both 40" and 43".
available in the US.
40" Class KU6300 4K UHD TV, UN40KU6300FXZA
43" Class KU6300 4K UHD TV, UN43KU6300FXZA
Did I miss any?
I leaning more towards the 43".
This model will fit.
Now to wait for a big sale.
My Studio: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7760&p=7777146#p7777146
- KVRian
- 513 posts since 22 Sep, 2015
Kalamata Kid wrote:I could only find two Samsung 4k TV's that fit the "KU6xx0"wickfut wrote:Samsung KU6xx0 do both 40" and 43".
available in the US.
40" Class KU6300 4K UHD TV, UN40KU6300FXZA
43" Class KU6300 4K UHD TV, UN43KU6300FXZA
Did I miss any?
I leaning more towards the 43".
This model will fit.
Now to wait for a big sale.
I'm in the UK so don't know what they call the US versions. I know the UK KU6400 is US KU7000 , the UK KS7000 in US is KS8000 etc. This is the bit you're going to have to do yourself.
- KVRAF
- 4589 posts since 7 Jun, 2012 from Warsaw
I don't see a need to watch 10 synth windows at the same time
Blog ------------- YouTube channel
Tricky-Loops wrote: (...)someone like Armin van Buuren who claims to make a track in half an hour and all his songs sound somewhat boring(...)
Tricky-Loops wrote: (...)someone like Armin van Buuren who claims to make a track in half an hour and all his songs sound somewhat boring(...)
- KVRAF
- 2147 posts since 30 Oct, 2006 from Australia, NSW
I have a Samsung 4K monitor as my second monitor 27" .You don't need high refresh rates for audio work only gaming and video production .The hi res screen in audio will be easier on your eyes for periods of long work.
http://www.voltagedisciple.com
Patches for PHASEPLANT ACE,PREDATOR, SYNPLANT, SUB BOOM BASS2,PUNCH , PUNCH BD
AALTO,CIRCLE,BLADE and V-Haus Card For Tiptop Audio ONE Module
https://soundcloud.com/somerville-1i
Patches for PHASEPLANT ACE,PREDATOR, SYNPLANT, SUB BOOM BASS2,PUNCH , PUNCH BD
AALTO,CIRCLE,BLADE and V-Haus Card For Tiptop Audio ONE Module
https://soundcloud.com/somerville-1i
- KVRian
- 513 posts since 22 Sep, 2015
it was to show what size the vst instruments GUI were in relation to the rest of the screen , not how to watch 10 synths at once.DJ Warmonger wrote: I don't see a need to watch 10 synth windows at the same time. Maybe makes sense for effect chains. For Ableton user it's only interesting to see many tracks in Session View (horizontal) and Arrangement View (vertical).
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- KVRAF
- 3222 posts since 23 Dec, 2002
Quick question .... since you are a Cubase user. Do you find that the dialog box text and the midi insert effects are at a readable size? The arranger and mixer are scaleable so that shouldn't be a problem. I am just wondering about the other parts of Cubase which are not optimized for 4K screens.
Thanks for posting the picture... it gives a sense of scale which is what you were going for.
Thanks for posting the picture... it gives a sense of scale which is what you were going for.
wickfut wrote:it was to show what size the vst instruments GUI were in relation to the rest of the screen , not how to watch 10 synths at once.DJ Warmonger wrote: I don't see a need to watch 10 synth windows at the same time. Maybe makes sense for effect chains. For Ableton user it's only interesting to see many tracks in Session View (horizontal) and Arrangement View (vertical).
- KVRAF
- 16853 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
Talking about 4K monitors, here are some that qualify imho:
* Focal SM9
* Adam S3X-H
* Amphion Two15
* Genelec 8240A
4k$ that is...
Sorry, I'll get my coat
* Focal SM9
* Adam S3X-H
* Amphion Two15
* Genelec 8240A
4k$ that is...
Sorry, I'll get my coat
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
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- KVRAF
- 5851 posts since 9 Jul, 2002 from Helsinki
Monitor calibration with a colorimeter is a crucial part of a color-managed workflow, the idea is to adjust the colours your monitor displays so that they more or less resemble the colours your camera captured/the colours in the files you received. And you have better hopes of the colours printing as you see them, keeping the printing technology caveats in mind.Kalamata Kid wrote:wickfut wrote: re: calibration. don't see the point of paying some guy to come in and set your tv to reference levels. Your eyes adjust to different brightness, contrasts and colours anyway and the calibration would need the room to have the exact same sunlight levels in to remain accurate. Also, seems a bit of a waste when I only use Cubase and the odd game of Dark Souls/Division and net browsing whatever.
For audio work calibrating the monitor makes little if any sense. I was asking mostly for my Photoshop work. What I will do is what I did before. Since I am primarily concerned about the printed image, is to print a few images and see what I get.
The results of calibration depend on the quality of the monitor, doing it on some cheap ass TV may subjectively improve the image you see, but it will still most likely deviate from standards in channel-independent manner (ie reds may be more off than greens for example).
Calibration results in a more neutral image, which is pretty nice for all computer use, especially for watching films/series, but for non-professional graphics use knowing how the colours translate should suffice (just like with studio monitors), unless your monitor has some very strong colour cast.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 6081 posts since 27 Jul, 2001 from Tarpon Springs, Florida, USA
On the 28" monitor that just died the only thing I had to do is turn down the monitor brightness as my images we printing a bit dark. This forced me to brighten my images in Photoshop. They printed a bit brighter and they look great. The color could be a bit better but I believe it was more my fault than the monitor's..jon wrote:Monitor calibration with a colorimeter is a crucial part of a color-managed workflow, the idea is to adjust the colours your monitor displays so that they more or less resemble the colours your camera captured/the colours in the files you received. And you have better hopes of the colours printing as you see them, keeping the printing technology caveats in mind.Kalamata Kid wrote:wickfut wrote: re: calibration. don't see the point of paying some guy to come in and set your tv to reference levels. Your eyes adjust to different brightness, contrasts and colours anyway and the calibration would need the room to have the exact same sunlight levels in to remain accurate. Also, seems a bit of a waste when I only use Cubase and the odd game of Dark Souls/Division and net browsing whatever.
For audio work calibrating the monitor makes little if any sense. I was asking mostly for my Photoshop work. What I will do is what I did before. Since I am primarily concerned about the printed image, is to print a few images and see what I get.
The results of calibration depend on the quality of the monitor, doing it on some cheap ass TV may subjectively improve the image you see, but it will still most likely deviate from standards in channel-independent manner (ie reds may be more off than greens for example).
Calibration results in a more neutral image, which is pretty nice for all computer use, especially for watching films/series, but for non-professional graphics use knowing how the colours translate should suffice (just like with studio monitors), unless your monitor has some very strong colour cast.
My Studio: viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7760&p=7777146#p7777146
