snyper77 wrote in post #11157405
...To "ChasP505", what do you mean "use the higher black level of the two when calibrating both monitors"? I don't know anything about any of this. What are you talking about and where do I "use" the higher black level????
It's been a long time since I used an iOne Display 2, and I'm more familiar with the Spyder3 Elite software... When you calibrate each monitor separately, you should be able to learn the black luminance value of each monitor. (Look at the profile summary.) Maybe one is 0.20cd/m2 and the other is 0.25cd/m2. Now, when you get out of Easy mode, I believe you can specify the black value. Use the higher of the two values as you know that both monitors can attain that level of black.
This is the first step in matching 2 of the same monitors. If you can't do this, skip it. Next is matching the color temperature or white balance. Once the first monitor is calibrated, you should have a reading on the color temperature. Apply that value when calibrating the second monitor.
If you calibrated both monitors to Native white, the monitors could differ by several hundred degrees Kelvin.
snyper77 wrote in post #11157405
Also, you are saying that the older monitor should be "less bright" than the new monitor, but it's not. After calibration, the new monitor is more subtle and dim, and the colors don't match on both monitors either when I view the exact same website, side by side.
I am talking about BEFORE calibration, all OSD settings at factory defaults. If you set both monitors' Brightness to 0, I would expect the older unit to be slightly dimmer. When my 2209WA was new, 0% Brightness yielded 120cd/m2 luminance. Now, 10% Brightness produces 120cd/m2.
Remember also, that the display panels of the respective monitors don't necessarily have the same exact performance characteristics or QC. In fact, they may have been manufactured by two completely different subcontractors of LG. We're talking about a consumer level monitor here, not a high end Eizo.