In theory, but it's a bit like saying "a Bugatti Veyron is faster than a McLaren F1 Road Car" in that past a certain point both are "more than adequate". As a case in point if you had a monitor with a 5000:1 contrast ratio next to one with a 10,000:1 contrast ratio, I doubt you'd see any difference. In the real world, most monitors have a useable dynamic range of "only" around 6 stops, which equates to a contrast ratio of "only" 64:1 (generalising, but monitors with 500:1 / 1000:1 are fine for PP).
I know - that's why I mentioned it to you weeks ago in the other threadMost monitors look dark grey when showing a pure black screen.
I've heard that before somewhereThe "ideal" is a calibrated monitor;
It depends on the contrast ratios of the monitors. It's very much "law of diminishing returns" stuff.Two calibrated monitors with different contrast ratios will appear visually different if placed side by side (and 9 out of 10 will prefer the higher contrast ratio monitor).
It's more a case of poor calibration limits the range of values available to the profile.The error in my origional statement was suggesting that profiling/calibrating limits the capabilties of the display rather than setting the monitor to achive its maximum potential.
Yes; but for most people it's the other way around in that a uncalibrated monitor reduces it's performance; some can be compensated for by the profile, but others can't (eg blacks that are gray at level 0, or whites that aren't bright enough at level 255)Calibrating the device will never reduce the performance of the monitor - it simply sets it correctly according to its physical capabilities.
In theory, but this is based on the assumption that there are good and bad monitors out there whereas these days it's more a case of pretty much all modern LCD screens being in the "more than adequate" category with respect to contrast ratios / dynamic range. Looking at the specs, many should be capable of 11 stops (or more) of DR and yet in reality, these don't look any different to those with far more conservative figures; it takes something like a Brightside monitor with localised LED backlighting to produce something where these sorts of dynamic range can actually be seen.A high-contrast image displayed on a monitor with a low constrast ratio will end up with blacks merging together, and white merging together visually. A higher contrast ratio (aka dynamic range), will handle this situation with much more grace.
Which is why I suggested getting a profiler; I didn't think I'd convince you otherwiseThe situation you describe, Colin, is similar to how I had my monitor set before I bought a calibration system. It was very crisp, but I was crushing a lot of my blacks to get that very nice look to it