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X-Rite ColorChecker Classic (MSCCC)

  • Based on 2,107 reviews
Condition: Used - Very Good
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Arrives Saturday, Jun 27
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Features

  • The Professionals Choice industry leading hardware & software for Display Calibration and Projector Calibration with unlimited control
  • Increased Functionality - i1Display Pro combines ambient light measurement, monitor profiling and projector profiling into 1 sleek, compact and fully integrated device at 5X faster measurements than previous devices
  • EXCLUSIVE X-RITE TECHNOLOGY! Mobile Friendly - Compatible with X-Rite ColorTRUE mobile app for calibrating Apple iOS and Android mobile devices
  • Incorporates technologically advanced filter and optical systems, fast measurement speed, and unrivaled color accuracy on all modern display and projector technologies, such as LED, Plasma, RG Phosphor, OLED and Wide Gamut
  • Future Proof - spectrally calibrated, making it field-upgradeable to support future display technologies
  • Profile optimization, display trending, display uniformity testing, and more
  • EXCLUSIVE X-RITE TECHNOLOGY! Features PANTONE Spot Color optimization

Description

Don’t waste precious time perfecting images or video with a display that does not accurately represent your digital files. A calibrated and profiled display is a critical element in an efficient digital workflow. The X-Rite i1Display Pro is the ultimate choice for discerning photographers, filmmakers, designers and imaging professionals looking for the highest level of on-screen color accuracy for displays, laptops, mobile devices and projectors. Two user modes (Basic and Advanced) provide serious Color Perfectionists with the perfect combination of unrivaled color precision, speed, options and controls to fit any workflow. Includes quality assurance functions and display uniformity testing.

Brand: X-Rite


Screen Surface Description: Matte


Special Feature: Minimum RAM 1024 MB


Connectivity Technology: USB


Color: Black


Screen Finish: Matte


Brand: X-Rite


Model Number: EODIS3


Warranty Description: Calibrite – 12‑month warranty against defects in materials or workmanship (registration required within 30 days). Authorized U.S. and local-market purchases only.


UPC: 044112925493 848826026459 778889486184 072858937364 071020050887 093007669264


Manufacturer: X-Rite


Global Trade Identification Number: 69


Unit Count: 1.0 Count


Item Type Name: X-rite i1display pro.


Additional Features: Minimum RAM 1024 MB


Color: Black


Mounting Type: Desk Mount


Item Weight: 0.55 Pounds


Connectivity Technology: USB


Hardware Connectivity: USB


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Jun 27

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Fantastic Results, Powerful (but Complicated) Software
This is a comparison of the Datacolor Spyder4 Elite and the X-Rite i1Display Pro, both of which I had here at the same time. First, let's compare the physical devices themselves. The Spyder4 device is purposely designed to look like a "spider" (if spiders had 3 legs) to stay in line with the marketing of the name brand. It's a very large device. It's hung from its own USB cable from the top of the monitor, with a counterweight in the back to keep the device in place. It's very large, which can make it difficult to use on the lower sections of the screen during screen uniformity tests. I have a large-ish 27" monitor, and I had to hold the spider in place at a 90 degree angle with my hands during those parts of screen testing. In addition, the position of the cable on the device means that if you have a screen that sits deep in its bezel, it's physically impossible for the Spyder4 to sit flat against the screen on its own unless you can tilt the monitor way back. Even on my screen with relatively shallow bezels, and with a stand that can tilt back 20 degrees, it was often difficult to get it sitting flat on the screen. This can get frustrating. On the other hand, the i1Display Pro is a very small device that can easily fit anywhere on your screen. The setup is mostly the same, where you hang the device from its USB cable over the top of your display, with a counterweight to hold it in place. In this case, the cable is positioned so that it contributes towards holding the device flat against the screen, no matter how deep your panel sits compared to the bezels. I never had any trouble getting it to sit flat against my screen, I didn't even need to resort to tilting the screen. And it sat comfortably flat on its own anywhere on the screen, even at the extreme bottom corners where the Spyder4 could not reach. There are really 2 main performance criteria to consider with these devices: speed and accuracy. I used these devices with their respective software packages, so I'm not sure if they'd work differently in a single profiling software package that supports both of them. However the differences I observed within their own environments were very noticeable. First and foremost, the Spyder4 was clunky and slow, while the i1Display Pro was lightning fast and intuitive. For example, while setting brightness and contrast early on in the profiling process, the Spyder4 would take a reading, ask me to make changes, then wait for me to click the "Update" button to take another reading and update the results. This is slow, tedious and error prone. Meanwhile, the i1Profiler software gave me a constant readout of the screen brightness as I made changes, with results displaying immediately. Also, during the profiling process, the Spyder4 Elite software frequently paused to wait unnecessarily for my input. For example, after setting the brightness properly, there was another button to proceed with profiling. And when it was done profiling, there was another button to "Finish". And these buttons show up half-hidden under the Spyder4 device itself, with no obvious screen prompts to let you know they're there. So if you're away from your desk and just glancing at the screen once in a while, you might not realize that the profiling process is waiting for your input. It's a very frustrating design. On the other hand, the i1Profiler software had no such issues. When there were prompts, they were few and far between, and clearly noticeable from anywhere in the room. Most of the process was very automated. The ability of the software to adjust most monitors automatically makes the process even more quick and straightforward. Patch color reading with the Spyder4 is painfully slow. A patch is displayed, the Spyder4 flashes briefly, then there's an interminable moment before the next patch comes up and the process repeats again. With the i1Display Pro, patch color reading is blazing fast. You can see color patches flying through the display faster than they can be identified by eye. The reading speed for each patch can vary, so I assume the software is waiting for the color to stabilize before accepting the reading from the device. This gives me confidence that the software is performing its job as fast as it can while still being accurate. The end result with the Spyder 4 was disappointing. I always ended up with a magenta cast on my Dell U2317H. This was true with the monitor in both sRGB and wide-gamut modes. On my super-old Asus V242H, I ended up with a blue cast (this is an sRGB CCFL LCD monitor). The i1Display Pro is directly supported by my Dell monitor for hardware calibrating, and results were superb. I was able to add a flawless sRGB preset and a full-gamut preset that covered 99.5% AdobeRGB (plus much, much more beyond). Colors are neutral, whites are white, and shadows are crisp and detailed while still reaching pitch black levels. These settings are stored right in my monitor's LUT, so they're not dependent on a software LUT modification in the video card. I also used the i1Display Pro to calibrate my Asus monitor using software calibration. Results were again superb. My Asus perfectly matches the Dell when I have the latter set to my custom sRGB mode. As far as software features go, I found the Spyder4 Elite software to be kludgy and clunky. It's mostly geared for consumers, with most of the advanced stuff hidden away. Even then, the advanced stuff isn't very configurable. The different package levels of Spyder4 (Basic, Pro, Elite) don't actually have anything to do with the device. They all come with the exact same device. It's just that certain software features are arbitrarily removed from the software as you go down in tiers. This makes the varying cost of each level kinda suspect. I'm pretty sure they're not making a loss on the Basic version, so they must be more than doubling their profits on the Elite version in comparison. It's not like they developed 3 different versions of the software for each level. They just developed the main one, then hacked away at the good stuff for the other levels. In contrast, the i1Profiler software is incredibly advanced and can do just about anything... but getting it to perform anything beyond the built-in generic tasks is very difficult. You can build your own workflows from scratch, but this tales knowledge and experience and a lot of manual work. Once the workflow is created and saved, you can run it anytime with just a couple of clicks. There are no different levels of this software, no "Pro" vs "Basic". However there are certain features in the software which are enabled/disabled depending on which device you have plugged in. For the i1Display Pro, only the monitor and projector modules are active. You need different devices to calibrate a scanner or printer, etc, all of which gets done in this exact same software. I ended up returning the Spyder4. Results were disappointing, and after I got to try the i1Display Pro, the Spyder4 just paled in comparison. It's like comparing a point-and-shoot camera (Spyder4) with a full-featured DSLR (i1Display Pro). ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2014 by Amazon Customer

  • Easy and Quick To Use
It is August of 2013 and I'm still using a mid-2010 27" iMac. It has 8GB of RAM, and an ATI Radeon HD 5750 with 1024 MB of memory. The software is the most current Mac OSX at 10.8.4. I received the i1 Display Pro today, carefully installed the software. The software immediately updated itself to a much newer version it went from 1.1.1 to 1.5.0 which is dated July 2013. I had no problem with the install, update or registration. Make sure you first install the software, then connect the device, then register it while manually selecting the correct device in the radio buttons. Now you are ready to go. The start manual is lean, but there is an extensive help system and tips for each step of the process. At the bottom left hand corner of the software home screen is a link to some video tutorials. They are helpful and worth using if this is your first device to calibrate your monitor. (It was my first.) I had recently spent time manually calibrating the monitor and thought I had done well. The process with the calibrating tool changed my calibration and showed aspects of it to be far off. With the new calibration I'm printing from photoshop with excellent results. I expect to see significant changes in how I prepare my images. So now I have an easy to use, accurate set up with a lot of options for my monitor and for my Cinema display and any other monitor I could conceivably end up with. If only the cost of the device covered printer calibration.... The device for that costs over $1500. Well, I expect to have pretty good results as it is without the additional expenditure! In summary: -Software worked and installed smoothly on my old iMac with current OSX. -It updated to a recent current version. -Registration was online and very quick. -Software had no issues, no bugs, no memory leaks, no problems, and was easy to use. -My iMac and soon my other systems will be well calibrated. -It does all you want it to do and more. (Well a free printer calibration would be nice, but it isn't that kind of device!) - I gave it 5 stars for all of the above reasons - no problems, works as described, accurate, easy. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2013 by NY Steve

  • Solid color calibration but not the most user friendly
I have both a Datacolor Spyder4Elite and an X-Rite i1Display Pro. Both give good results on my Dell U3011 30" Wide-Gamut monitor. The X-Rite unit is much faster, allowing it to create a more complete color correction table in a shorter time. I've found the color correction with the X-Rite to be somewhat better that the Datacolor, but not by so much that it is significant in most cases. I actually use 3 monitors (mostly because I had them). One is the Dell, one is an old Samsung CCFL LCD panel and one is a 2008 (or 2009?) Samsung LED LCD panel. Interestingly, the older CCFL panel has better color than the LED panel, but the LED panel is brighter. The Dell is the monitor I use for all critical work. No color calibration will make these three monitors match, because they are simply to different in technology and their weak colors are different. The best you can do is get the narrow gamut colors the same. Comparing the color correction with both units, they give very similar optimized results when the software is setup similarly. I like the Spyder software better that the X-Rite software, but both work well. The Spyder software is more intuitive and steps you through the calibration process better. It allows easy options for calibrating multiple monitors, although even with the best possible calibration, you'll see differences between different monitor types. The Spyder software provides for an iterative (but slow) grey balance at different luminosities. The X-Rite software does not do this, but allows you to set up your own color patches for correction points, and gives some more options on the type of color profiling to be done. You can make a very complete table of color corrections, which with the speed of the X-Rite unit is practical whereas it would be painfully slow to do fine gradations of correction points with the Spyder unit. With the X-Rite unit, you can also choose several custom color patches to set up calibration points based on Pantone colors or based on colors from your own photographs. Both software packages install a timer that monitors when you last calibrated your display and reminds you to redo the calibration at an interval you set. The both write a color profile that works in the windows color system, and automatically loads that profile as your default. The Spyder version allows you to turn that profile on and off easily, but I'm not sure why you would want to. I feel the X-Rite unit and software has the advantage in measuring and writing the profile, but the Spyder software is better at analyzing the performance of the monitor. I use the X-Rite pretty much exclusively now because of speed. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2013 by Peter Henry

  • i1 display pro, Rocks if you own a Mac.
I owned i1 display 2 and because Xrite will not support Mac OSX 10.8 for that model I bought the i1display Pro. their website says they support 10.8. This does not connect with real life. The software does the same thing that the i1 display 2 software does, it crashes. So after forking out another $249 to calibrate my monitor I'm in the same boat that I was in before buying this product.Until Xrite can get their s*** together, avoid this product like the plague. This is an addendum to my original review. Many of my issues were because I had migrated my account from my G5 to my new intel Mac. The issues I encountered did not show up until The OS was upgraded to 10.8 Mountain Lion. The problems I incurred were due to unneeded crap from the Power PC days. I also had problems with Adobe Creative Suite CS6 and Microsoft Office crashing on that system. Two days ago I got a second Mac it came with 10.8.1 installed so before migrating my account over I installed all of my problem software Adobe CS6, Microsoft Office 2011, and the Xrite software. On a fresh system all of this software works like a charm. The iDisplay Pro works wonderfully. The newer calibrator works much better than the iDisplay and allows a better job of calibration on both my Thunderbolt display and my old Cinema HD display. Now that I have solved my problems I am very pleased with my purchase and would recommend this product. I apologize for my original review. I was frustrated by software not working and after spending so much money on everything I was a little upset. After making sure everything worked I migrated my old account from the first Intel Mac to the new one. I did not migrate my Applications just the rest of the account. All the software I had problems with still works and that makes me very pleased. I hope this helps someone. Again this really is a great product. One more update. I'm using Mavericks OS X now and i1 display pro works like a charm. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2012 by Buko

  • Excellent hardware, mediocre software - but works with other Open Source SW
Preface: I'm not a professional and not even an amateur photographer, just a display enthusiast who can't stand inaccurate greys, crushed dark details, washed out midtones, color tints, etc. Others have already discussed the high quality of the i1D3's hardware, as well as the disappointing software (one example: makes blacks brownish on lower end displays with mediocre sRGB coverage). So I just want to make sure everyone knows that it works with DispCalGUI (using Argyll CMS) - this is free & open source software - and produces great calibration results with it (also gets better black levels than i1 Profiler). The i1D3 also works with HCFR, which I use to measure the before & after in detail (gamma curves, primary & secondary color accuracy, saturation sweep, grayscale, color temperature, etc) which apparently the included i1 Profiler software can't do properly (or I haven't figured it out), it just gives a very basic report. Of course, amateurs & professionals probably already know that it also works with higher quality paid software like SpectraCal CalMAN but I didn't want to have to spend another $100. Some of my displays which I have calibrated and have achieved pleasing results considering what they were before: - Asus VG236H (TN, 98% sRGB coverage) - I'm assuming these are as good as things get with a good TN: color dE R5.8 G2.8 B3.1 Y4.2 C2.1 M4.3, gamma 2.2 perfect, grays dE average 4.0 (with >20% at under 2.0), etc. The "before" measurements were: grays average dE was 18.4 (WTF!), color dE R8.1 G2.9 B17.3 Y2.0 C25.8 M23.3 (again, big WTF) - Dell Studio 15 (2008 laptop, around 85% sRGB IIRC) - cheap laptop TN, but still: calibration resulted in HUGE improvement: no more blue tint, big gamma correction, grays quite neutral, etc. Contrast reduced only slightly - Samsung Series 9 laptop: PLS (IPS) screen with 66% sRGB (disappointing) - even with the limited color space, at least color temperature and gamma and greys and so on were nicely corrected so it is still a pretty big improvement. So obviously none of these results are good for even amateur photo editing (the Asus might just be ok if it wasn't for bad TN viewing angles) but they are fantastic for my enjoyment of all of these devices (web browsing, watching video, documents, etc. - typical consumer). Unfortunately, ICC Profiles are largely ignored by games which makes me very angry but what can I do? Not recommended for gamers - buy a screen with good factory calibration. Otherwise, completely worth the $250 I paid for it - I see it's flirting with $210 now. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2013 by SGS

  • Makes a Real Improvement
I've used this device and the included software on the set of computers (monitors) I own and on those owned by a number of family members and friends. It makes a real improvement in the output of the display. I use black backgrounds with my displays. The first thing I noticed when I calibrated them was that the blacks were much blacker. The whole display also just looks better. The colors seem "right." (a subjective statement I know) I also find my monitors are set to not be as bright which helps a lot in reducing eye strain. I use three Dell 24-inch monitors at my main workstation. The Display Pro calibrated them perfectly such that they all match and look great. The software is quite easy to use. There are choices for calibration which trade time against precision. Even then the most complete calibration takes only about 10 minutes. The calibration is directly loaded into Windows with a mouse click and then takes effect. No further user intervention is required. I use the device and software on a PC. The software also claims to run on Mac's. I assume it does since it works so well on a PC but I have no direct experience using it on a Mac. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2013 by Jeff Switzer

  • Do not buy. Not worth the hassle.
I bought this product from a Brick and Mortar store. The CD which came with the product did not install properly. Minor issue, I just went online and downloaded the newest drivers available. Those drivers did install the software. Once i opened up the product the it showed it was in Demo mode. I kept plugging in the dongle trying every single USB port that i have, powered USB hub, computer USB port, and USB 3.0 port. They recognized the port but the software would not acknowledge the dongle. Using a 3-party software i was able to verify the windows computer was acknowledging the dongle. I went to the website and posted was tips if the software did not recognize the dongle. I attempted all the various tips and nothing worked. After hours searching the internet (which i am going to have to search again for) I noticed a post stating to install the software, then go back and delete the program folders the installer created, reboot and install again. I thought it was stupid, but i tried it. It worked. Great. Pretty much smooth sailing until the computer rebooted. Now i'm at square one again. I have to go through the same process all over again. I would not recommend this to anyone. I would try sypder if i was to do it again, but i admit i have no experience with their products. Update: While i would still not recommend this product i did find out an opensource program "Dispcalgui" Works great with the i1pro display dongle. You can calibrate your monitors but there is no ambient light monitoring. update: Nov 4, 2015. This is still a peice of crap. Fresh install with windows 10 and the program only worked one time. Again, back to the i1 profiler not being able to detect the dongle. Worst purchase ever. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2014 by The Drizzle

  • Seems high quality. Was easy to use on Windows 10.
I'm happy with it. It seems to be working great with my Windows 10 Dell XPS 15 9550 through my Dell TB16 dock to my Dell U2711 monitor over displayport. The software ran without a bug. Easy to use for me, not sure why others say it's hard, I can't see how it could be any easier. I did the basic setup, not the advanced. The software guides you through taking live measurements while adjusting your displays hardware brightness, contrast, and RGB individual channel controls, if you have them. The response during this interactive portion was very fast. Then, the automated portion of the calibration ran quickly in my opinion. I look forward to using this calibrator with any eventual monitor I might get having hardware LUT, it seems that this is the only calibrator that works with many manufacturer's software. My Dell u2711 display doesn't have this though so I couldn't test it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2018 by S. C.

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