You can look at to see if your monitor's in there or just google the modelnumber calibration and see what you find. In other words, while you can't really "calibrate" a monitor by copying other people's settings, but it will get you in the ballpark, so that would be my advice. In the past, I've copied calibration values from other people and I found when comparing these, while they differ, often it's not too much. Mind you, the monitor was clearly too red for me at 100/100/100 yet I ended up with the same value for G as for R ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I ended up with R 92, G 92, B 89 for this. And you kinda do that for a while until it's okay. You turn down red until it's "good" but then you have too much blue, so turn down blue, now green is too much, but red is also too much again, so turn that down. Brightness has almost no consequences for these values, so you can actually change brightness depending on your needs without messing up the colors. I've actually calibrated my monitor with a colorimeter for the first time, and you start that process off by settings R G B values. Pick, Assemble and Install: Video Guide.No intentionally harmful, misleading or joke advice.No excessive posting (more than one submission in 24 hours).No selling, trading or requests for valuation.No self-promotion, advertising, begging, or surveys.No submissions about memes, jokes, meta, or hypothetical / dream builds.No titles that are all-caps, clickbait, PSAs, pro-tips or contain emoji.No submissions about retailer or customer service experiences.No submissions about sales, deals or unauthorized giveaways.No submissions about hardware news, rumors, or reviews. ![]() Please keep in mind that we are here to help you build a computer, not to build it for you. Submit Build Help/Ready post Submit Troubleshooting post Submit other post New Here? BuildAPC Beginner's Guide Live Chat on Discord Daily Simple Questions threads
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