The native EOTF of just about any monitor is 2.2, as that is the EOTF manufactured into the glass.
So when you do a Gamut Coverage verification any difference in the EOTF will result in a poorer values if the display cannot totally cover the target gamut.
If you have deliberately set the black to be 0.02ish, that is fine.
(It is actually a goo thing to do with OLEDs.)
I was just checking you were aware of the value, as OLEDS basically have a zero black, but do then tend to clip as they all suffer near black hysteresis.
The profile you provided was the native profile, not the calibrated verification.
And how are you probe matching, as the green/red edge is not normally so low gamut vs. the target on those monitors.
(Test with the Correlation File instead of probe matching.)
Edit: I just realised you are quoting the gamut coverage after a LUT is generated.
I used the option within Manual Measure, hence the difference with altering the target colour space values!
When actually generating a LUT the value will vary with LUT Generation Size (if you have a higher license level), exactly as per the number of points in the profile when you use the option in Manual Measure.
With a 128^3 LUT the result is 89%.
Anything around 90% is exactly what I would expect for that profile.Steve
Steve Shaw
Mob Boss at Light Illusion