ok thanks , next question i have sony4k tv i can send model , is it possible that i made some screen shots of my video picture settings and someone check is they good set for looking movies i mean contrast , colours etc ?
As far as the U9-H itself or even Kodi are concerned,
just leave them at their default settings for brightness/contrast (or any other settings that could actually alter the picture). Ideally, it's best to make all of these necessary adjustments on the TV itself as they're generally much more effective & you'll have more options for fine tuning to your preferences as well. (If you have a half decent & recent model, the TV itself will also store & remember any adjustments you make for each individual HDMI input. Ergo, as long as you always keep the U9-H connected to the same HDMI input on your TV you'll only need to set it all up once for the U9-H in general. (If you need to make minor tweaks or adjustments along the way after that, you can obviously do so as required.)
is it possible that i made some screen shots of my video picture settings and someone check is they good set for looking movies i mean contrast , colours etc ?
Otherwise, not really no!! It would be incredibly difficult indeed to give any advise on what you're now asking from photographs of your TV screen due to a whole variety of different factors involved!! (Not to mention, we all see differently too & we each have our subjective preferences.) Even if you took screenshots of all the individual settings themselves (& there'll literally be several dozen of them to go through at a minimum), someone would need to have access to an identical model to be able to advise you on the matter with any degree of certainty. However, even then it's impossible to be 100% accurate trying to do things remotely like this as you're now asking. (This is precisely why some people pay a small fortune to have their TV's professionally calibrated in place. Even with the most popular mass produced TV's & although technically identical on paper, the display itself can vary greatly from one individual TV to another.)
Your best option regarding these particular settings would be to try the "
AVForums". (And no, we can't link you there directly before you ask that too
, but they can be found very easily with a simple Google search - AVForums).
Once there (its layout is very similar to this forum), just browse to the
TV forums, then go to the
Sony TVs forum, & then browse through the threads for your "
Sony [your-model] owner's thread". (If it's a common/popular model, there could be a high number of posts from other owners that also have your model who may have shared all of their ideal picture settings. Some owners post up their settings in great detail too, sometimes including all of the settings they're using following a professional calibration as well. As briefly explained above, two identical TV's will rarely calibrate identically but you can at least use someone else's settings that they've posted up as a rough baseline & then adjust whatever you like to get everything how you want it with your TV.)
Bear in mind that your own subjective preferences will also be a factor. While not always perfect too, the top TV manufacturers such as Sony don't do a bad job these days with factory settings for each respective model. They're not typically miles out. (The problems can often start because of the same issues already mentioned above with mass production & subjective differences which is why modern TV's come absolutely loaded with so many user adjustable settings.) A fair majority just don't ever bother adjusting anything other than a handful of the most basic settings required though. (Those that want to get neck deep in attempting to calibrate a TV themselves or start to trawl through a TV's more advanced settings are typically in a minority.)
When all is said & done, your own two eyes are the best place to start anyway & you'd already know it yourself if anything was way, way off. If something doesn't look quite right, then adjust one setting at a time & only make small adjustments, & then see how those adjustments have helped, (or not). Also bear in mind, adjust one setting on a TV & it may in turn throw one or more other settings out. So, small adjustments, trial & error, & be patient
!!