bohdank wrote in post #11642259
I have no idea what you mean by having to know panel types...etc.. to get a proper calibration. The software doesn't care and there is no way to tell it what kind of display you are calibrating other than if it's an LCD or CRT. If you could elaborate, I am interested.
Some displays are harder to calibrate but this is a problem with calibration software and hardware more often than the display although there have been issues with some displays and poor quality control or design flaws.
IPS panels usually calibrate well with some standard settings - gamma 2.2, white point 6500 or D65, lightness 120-140cd/m2 and contrast 250:1 - these are common settings for color editing.
Almost the same with PVA, S-PVA and MVA panels.
TN panels are the real problem. Some are very good, some are awful. Usually, a Native white point is used to calibrate these, as TN panels don't support well changes in color temperature. For example, setting a White Point of 6500K often results in very magentish tints... The TN panels usually are very contrasty. Sometimes I use an unusual gamma of 2.5 or 2.4, as with 2.2 the display turns very contrast and with very closed dark tones. With MBPs, gamma of 2.5 helps a lot.
These are not standard settings for these types of panels. Calibration settings depend on monitor electronics too, so to determine the best settings, multiple calibrations are needed. And the results are controlled visually with a test chart.
The main condition to achieve a good calibration is to start with a high quality display with quality panel and good electronics. You always get what you pay for 