Degradado
PRECISIÓN DEL COLOR

Prueba de Degradado

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Utilice 'Suave' para comprobar si hay bandas en el panel. Utilice pasos para verificar niveles discretos.

Haga clic en cualquier lugar o presione ESC durante la prueba para regresar a esta pantalla.

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Mastering Color Depth

The Banding Problem

Color Banding (or posterization) occurs when your monitor can't display enough shades to create a smooth gradient. Instead of a seamless transition from black to white, you see distinct "steps" or stripes. This is a common issue in 6-bit and 8-bit panels.

8-bit vs 10-bit

Standard monitors are 8-bit (16.7 million colors). Professional monitors are 10-bit (1.07 billion colors), offering 64x more shades. This test reveals if your "10-bit" monitor is actually using dithering (FRC) or true native color depth.

1. Choose Gradient Type

1. Video Editing & HDR

HDR content requires 10-bit color to avoid banding in skies and shadows. If your reference monitor has banding, you might wrongly apply de-banding filters to your footage, degrading the image quality.

2. Digital Art & Illustration

Digital painters need to know if the banding they see is in their artwork or just their monitor. This test gives you a "perfect gradient" reference. If you see bands here, it's your monitor, not your brush settings.

3. Gaming Immersion

Modern games use volumetric fog and dynamic lighting. On a poor monitor, these effects look like blocky, pixelated messes. High-quality IPS or OLED panels handle these subtle transitions much better than cheap TN panels.