F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Discussing Windows HDR involves its display enhancements and settings.

Discussing Windows HDR involves its display enhancements and settings.

Discussing Windows HDR involves its display enhancements and settings.

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IIGuiGalouLT
Member
193
06-01-2023, 12:38 PM
#1
I operate with my screen at 120 nits, yet when I enabled HDR in Windows it instantly adjusted the brightness to its highest level. When I attempt to manually set the brightness to match previous HDR-free levels, the display colors appear distorted. I also lack a colorimeter to verify whether applying the same brightness setting during HDR and normal modes produces identical nits output. Additionally, could there be a way to keep HDR off by default but activate it automatically when watching HDR content?
I
IIGuiGalouLT
06-01-2023, 12:38 PM #1

I operate with my screen at 120 nits, yet when I enabled HDR in Windows it instantly adjusted the brightness to its highest level. When I attempt to manually set the brightness to match previous HDR-free levels, the display colors appear distorted. I also lack a colorimeter to verify whether applying the same brightness setting during HDR and normal modes produces identical nits output. Additionally, could there be a way to keep HDR off by default but activate it automatically when watching HDR content?

Z
zamys
Senior Member
690
06-01-2023, 01:21 PM
#2
Modify the SDR brightness slider to achieve the desired light level for your SDR content.
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zamys
06-01-2023, 01:21 PM #2

Modify the SDR brightness slider to achieve the desired light level for your SDR content.

J
JXLPixels
Junior Member
22
06-02-2023, 11:30 AM
#3
It helped you avoid eye strain while playing HDR games on your display.
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JXLPixels
06-02-2023, 11:30 AM #3

It helped you avoid eye strain while playing HDR games on your display.

M
minerbob354
Member
82
06-02-2023, 02:23 PM
#4
I attempted to adjust the slider to 25%, 50%, 75% and 100% but the display didn't behave as expected. Can you use only 120 nits in Windows with HDR enabled? When watching HDR videos, should it automatically increase brightness to the maximum level? Ideally, it should work similarly to how HDR is managed on Android, allowing normal brightness for regular tasks and boosting to full brightness when viewing HDR content.
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minerbob354
06-02-2023, 02:23 PM #4

I attempted to adjust the slider to 25%, 50%, 75% and 100% but the display didn't behave as expected. Can you use only 120 nits in Windows with HDR enabled? When watching HDR videos, should it automatically increase brightness to the maximum level? Ideally, it should work similarly to how HDR is managed on Android, allowing normal brightness for regular tasks and boosting to full brightness when viewing HDR content.

R
ricby
Senior Member
681
06-07-2023, 01:02 PM
#5
Which display are you employing? On my LG C2 with the SDR brightness adjusted to around four, it functions quite well. HDR tends to appear very intense, whereas SDR often appears quite faint.
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ricby
06-07-2023, 01:02 PM #5

Which display are you employing? On my LG C2 with the SDR brightness adjusted to around four, it functions quite well. HDR tends to appear very intense, whereas SDR often appears quite faint.

S
ShaneTV
Member
162
06-07-2023, 04:52 PM
#6
32-inch Samsung OLED display with 4K resolution and 240Hz refresh rate.
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ShaneTV
06-07-2023, 04:52 PM #6

32-inch Samsung OLED display with 4K resolution and 240Hz refresh rate.

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Rodri_Mendes
Member
223
06-08-2023, 12:05 AM
#7
I set it up exactly as intended, using my advanced C2 level. The screen brightness was cranked to the highest setting. What I needed was a system that automatically handled everything without manual adjustments based on the task. This SDR slider made it possible. Now any web video runs in HDR seamlessly—thanks to Nvidia.
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Rodri_Mendes
06-08-2023, 12:05 AM #7

I set it up exactly as intended, using my advanced C2 level. The screen brightness was cranked to the highest setting. What I needed was a system that automatically handled everything without manual adjustments based on the task. This SDR slider made it possible. Now any web video runs in HDR seamlessly—thanks to Nvidia.