HDR Calibration On HP Omnibook Ultra Flip

BigBlake987

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Aug 29, 2025
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When i go into the windows hdr calibration app, the max luminance and full frame luminance test do not work and i just see white with no gray at all levels when I am at max brightness. Am I supposed to set my brightness lower to do those tests?
 

Solution
Short answer: Yes — on many HDR laptops/displays you must lower the panel’s brightness (and/or disable auto/dynamic brightness) to see the gray steps during the Windows HDR calibration tests. At full HDR peak brightness the screen clips to full white and the gray ramp disappears.
Why that happens (brief):
  • In HDR the panel/output are allowed to hit a very high peak luminance. A full-frame near-white patch can drive the display into its peak-output mapping so small differences between gray levels become visually identical (all look white).
  • Some laptops also use dynamic contrast / ambient-light adaptive brightness which forces full output for a “white” fullscreen pattern.
  • The Windows calibration tool assumes you’ll change...
Short answer: Yes — on many HDR laptops/displays you must lower the panel’s brightness (and/or disable auto/dynamic brightness) to see the gray steps during the Windows HDR calibration tests. At full HDR peak brightness the screen clips to full white and the gray ramp disappears.
Why that happens (brief):
  • In HDR the panel/output are allowed to hit a very high peak luminance. A full-frame near-white patch can drive the display into its peak-output mapping so small differences between gray levels become visually identical (all look white).
  • Some laptops also use dynamic contrast / ambient-light adaptive brightness which forces full output for a “white” fullscreen pattern.
  • The Windows calibration tool assumes you’ll change brightness so you can actually see the gradations.
What to try (step-by-step)
  1. Plug the laptop into AC power (so brightness behaves predictably).
  2. Disable adaptive/auto brightness and any dynamic contrast / “adaptive” display features in Windows and in any HP display utility / OSD.
    • Windows: Settings > System > Display > turn off “Brightness automatically adjust” / “Change brightness automatically when lighting changes” (name varies).
    • HP: open HP Display Control / BIOS/UEFI or OSD and turn off any adaptive picture modes.
  3. Enable HDR in Windows: Settings > System > Display > Use HDR (or Windows HD Color settings).
  4. Open the Windows HDR calibration tool: Settings > System > Display > Windows HD Color settings > Calibrate display for HDR video (or search “Calibrate HDR”).
  5. Set the laptop brightness down from max — start around 40–60% and run the max-luminance / full-frame tests. If you still only see white, lower it further until you can distinguish the gray steps. The exact % depends on your panel; stop when the steps are visible and then follow the app prompts.
  6. After the tests, restore your preferred brightness or the app’s recommended setting.
Other troubleshooting
  • Update GPU drivers (Intel/AMD/NVIDIA) and Windows before calibrating.
  • If the tests still fail, try an HDR test image or YouTube HDR clip (make sure the player is HDR-capable) to confirm whether the panel can show HDR grays at any brightness.
  • If you’re using an external monitor, check its HDR/metadata/OSD settings—some monitors have a separate “HDR mode” that overrides brightness control.
  • If HP firmware or a display driver utility is forcing behavior, look for an HP-specific setting or BIOS update that addresses HDR behavior.
If you want, tell me:
  • Are you on Windows 11 or 10?
  • Is this the built-in laptop screen or an external monitor?
  • GPU make (Intel/AMD/NVIDIA)?
  • Whether you saw any “SDR content appearance” or HDR brightness sliders in Settings?
With those I can give model-specific steps (for example where HP hides the adaptive-brightness switches or which driver setting to change).
 

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