OPPO Digital BDP-93 사용자 설명서

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player and your television to get the optimal result. We recommend using a calibration disc 
such as the Spears & Munsil™ High Definition Benchmark Blu-ray Edition or Digital Video 
Essentials HD Basics
 as aids for adjusting.  First adjust the television’s picture controls for 
the best possible picture. Once that is done, try changing the player’s settings to further 
refine the picture to the optimal result. 
 
4.  Hue: To adjust the hue (tint) of the video output.   
 
5.  Saturation: To adjust the saturation (color intensity level) of the video output. 
 
6.  Sharpness: To set the sharpness of video output.  Sharpness (also called Detail/Edge 
Enhancement in previous OPPO players) is a video processing function that can control the 
image sharpness but at the same time may cause unwanted artifacts.   
 
For HDMI 1, the sharpness level can be set between -16 and +16.  The default is level 0, which 
turns off sharpness enhancement.  The negative levels may be used to reduce or eliminate 
overly sharpened video.  However, the picture may appear soft.  The positive levels increase 
the sharpness.   
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At level 1, the player applies low level Detail Enhancement, during which the video 
processor isolates the detailed parts from the original image, processes them separately 
and integrates back before the final output.   
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At level 2, the player increases Detail Enhancement to a higher level.  Generally, to make 
an image “sharper”, we recommend using level 1 and 2.   
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At level 3 and above, the player adds Luminance Transition Improvement (LTI) and 
Chroma Transition Improvement (CTI), which further sharpen the luminance transition and 
chroma transition.  However, we do not recommend using level 3 and above unless the 
source content is poorly produced and blurry.  
 
For HDMI 2 & Analog, the sharpness level can be set between 0 and +2. The default is level 
0.  The higher the level, the sharper the video details are. However, too high a sharpness level 
may cause while line etching around objects. 
 
7.  Noise Reduction: To select whether the player shall apply video noise reduction processing.   
 
For HDMI 1, the noise reduction level can be set between 0 and 8.  The default is level 0, 
which turns off noise reduction.   
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When set to level 1, the player adjusts the picture quality by reducing the “mosquito noise” 
(artifacts around the outlines of objects) and “block noise” (mosaic-like patterns caused by 
video compression).  These two noise reduction are also called Compression Artifacts 
Reduction (CAR) and have several levels of aggressiveness.   
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When set to level 2, the player applies the Motion Adaptive Video Noise Reduction (VNR), 
which handles the random noise and the film-grain noise (natural variation of picture 
intensity caused by film grain).  Its level is automatic because there is a noise estimator 
circuitry in the video processor that calculates how much noise presents and adjusts the 
level of VNR accordingly.   
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When set to 3 or 4, the player applies both CAR and Motion Adaptive VNR, with more 
aggressive “block noise” reduction at level 4.   
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At level 5, the player applies aggressive CAR for low quality video content, and adds 
Motion Adaptive VNR at level 6.   
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At level 7, the player applies the most aggressive CAR for very low quality video, and 
adds Motion Adaptive VNR at level 8.