(Page 1 of 1 pages for this article )

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Filed under: EditingGentryMedia Sister SitesProVideo CoalitionHardwareNAB 2011Post ProductionProductionVendor ChannelsSony

OLED Enters the Monitor Mainstream

The Sony Tech Guy | 06/28

Trimaster EL technology for the rest of us

image

An all-in-one chassis design, the PVM-2541 includes a range of inputs, standard.

Sony’s BVM Series Trimaster EL™ monitors were big news at the HPA Tech Retreat in February, and an even bigger hit at NAB, where they garnered one award after another.  Designed for critical evaluation, the BVM Series has always served the elite.  So it was all the more newsworthy that NAB saw the introduction of two new PVM Series monitors that combine Trimaster EL technology with tremendous value.  The PVM-1741 (16.5 inches viewable area, measured diagonally) carries a suggested list price of just $4,100 while the PVM-2541 (24.5 inches) has an MSRP of $6,100.  This places OLED performance right into the monitor mainstream.

E.L. Dorado

Much ink has already been spilled, and much bandwidth already burnt, to explain the eye-popping benefits of Sony Trimaster EL technology.  This replaces the conventional LCD with an Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) panel.  OLED is remarkably well suited to digital displays, offering high brightness, wide viewing angle, and stable color.  But what really sets the Trimaster EL system apart is superb black level and extremely fast switching speed. 

When a Trimaster EL pixel is off, it’s completely off.  A favorite demonstration is to position the monitor in a darkened room, powered down.  When the monitor is switched on to a vacant input, there’s no change in appearance.  If it weren’t for the status LEDs, you wouldn’t even know the monitor was powered up.  This makes the PVM-2541 and 1741 ideal partners for today’s high dynamic range cameras.  What low-level details these cameras can produce, these monitors can reproduce.  And where LCDs switch from white to black in a matter of milliseconds, Trimaster EL technology switches in microseconds—three orders of magnitude faster.  The technology is capable of phenomenal contrast and superb motion rendering.

All-in-one chassis

The PVM-2541 and 1741 have an all-in-one design with display and controls on a single chassis.  Shoppers going down the feature list will be impressed by how many boxes are already checked.  For example, the monitors include a pair of 3G/HD/SD-SDI inputs, plus HDMI™ and composite inputs, all standard.  As you would expect, both the 25 inch and the 17 inch have 1920 x 1080 resolution and 10-bit precision panel drivers.  The monitors support multiple gamuts including SMPTE C, EBU and ITU-R BT.709.  There’s also an internal waveform monitor, VITC time code window, Ethernet and parallel remote interfaces and decoding of SDI embedded audio with audio level meter.

image

Seven F buttons, no waiting.

Sony upgraded the menu system.  Seven Function buttons to give you instant access to selections.  One knob handles Scroll and Enter, which leaves only a Menu and Return button.  Customers are telling us it’s really simple and direct.

The next stage of Sony’s Trimaster EL revolution is coming soon to an edit bay near you.  PVM-2541 and PVM-1741 will be available in August.

Disclosure, to comply with the FTC’s rules 16 CFR Part 255 This article was either written by Sony employees or for Sony by an outside contractor. It is intended for the Sony Channel on ProVideo Coalition, which Sony sponsors.

(Page 1 of 1 pages for this article )




You must be registered to comment. This is an effort to reduce spam. Please REGISTER HERE.

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


 
NAB 2012: Assorted Snapshots
Adam Wilt | 05/08

A few cool things I saw at the show that didn’t fit into any other articles.

NAB is too big a show in too short a time to see more than a fraction of it. I’ve covered a few things in some depth (as have other PVC folks), but there’s plenty more that slips by without proper coverage. Here, I have a few photos…

Sony quietly announces the NX30 camcorder, a little sister to the NX70
Allan Tépper | 05/08

With an 1/2.88" sensor and 26mm wide angle (35mm eqv), the NX30 should ship in June for well under US$2500.

image

Although during the past year I’ve written quite a bit about the Sony NX70 (officially, the HXR-NX70) here in ProVideo Coalition magazine, I haven’t…

NAB 2012: Cameras & Lenses
Adam Wilt | 05/02

A brief sampling of interesting photographic tools at NAB.

I’ve already covered the basics of what Sony and Panasonic announced, as well as looking at Canon’s…






Copyright © 2012, HD Expo, LLC a division of Diversified Business Communications. DBA Createasphere

All rights reserved. HD EXPO, High Def EXPO, Createasphere, E-Tech, Entertainment Technology Exposition, 3D Production Workshop, VariCamp, P2 Camp, ColorCamp 101, and Lighting, Filters & Gels for HD are all trademarks of HD Expo, LLC.

Terms of Use  |  Privacy Policy

Check PageRank