Hi CM120884 -
Don't be alarmed. That problem is well known in video rendering... & not just with PDR. Even far more "pro" software does similar things. The degree is what varies.
Producing to MP4 involves compression, so first of all PDR (and other NLEs) have to decode the colours - then they have to re-encode them for the rendered video.
Then you have the other variable - media players, televisions etc (i.e. the thing that facilitates the viewing).
As an example, I made a little video containing only plain coloured boards with the colours labelled their RGB values. After rendering as H.264 MP4 1920x1080/30p @ 16Mbps, I viewed the produced video in a numbare of players & other software. For this post I only grabbed the
red slide and checked its rendered RGB value. Originally it was
255, 0, 0.
As you can see, there's barely any difference between the colour patches at the side... but it can make a difference when viewing a video. The whole thing might look a but duller, or darker/lighter.
Each app bumped up the green value, which makes it closer to yellow (unless the blue value also shifts).

I know - I get carried away sometimes.
Here's the
rendered video if yo'd like to check with your equipment.
If you could post snapshots of the same frame in (a) the original video in PDR & (B) the produced video in PDR that might help.
Cheers - Tony
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Apr 01. 2018 02:47
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