Yeah, I have a 5.1 setup, which it's obviously not as good as, so I don't use it that often on mine but I've found the sound pretty good from it on the rare occasion when I have.What about the "Acoustic Surface" in Sonys A1? I used a soundplate for my old hdtv but stopped using it with my a1 because the sound was almost identical.
Let us know how the difference is between the two! I'll be upgrading my ks8000 later this year and want to know if I should go with an oled or FALD tvJust bought a B8 for $1800cad! Upgrading from my defective KS8000. Pretty excited! Just have to wait for my tax return to be confirmed before I open it up...
Let us know how the difference is between the two! I'll be upgrading my ks8000 later this year and want to know if I should go with an oled or FALD tv
I went from a KS8000 to an OLED and it's a pretty massive step up all around.Let us know how the difference is between the two! I'll be upgrading my ks8000 later this year and want to know if I should go with an oled or FALD tv
I went from a KS8000 to an OLED and it's a pretty massive step up all around.
AH! I'm so ready!
Hi there ERA, I've bought an OLED about 2 months ago now and I wish I could say I couldn't be happier because holy shit it's such a beauty and the image quality is just amazing.
However I can see this pattern in the background and I have no clue what it is
It's hard to see on the picture but it has this pattern that you can see in my crudely drawn circles. The lines are also vertically which you can't really make out. I'm sure it's not burn-in because I haven't displayed anything resembling the pattern on the TV. I also saw some talks about banding in the last few pages but I don't think it's that either? The weird thing is that sometimes it's way more noticable than other times. Sometimes it's so in your face that it's hard to ignore but other times it's just really slightly there in the background
I had some artifacts out of the box with this TV but they quickly resolved itself. A nice poster here told me back then not to use the pixel refresher since it automatically does that and just shortens longetivity of the TV. So I have no used it but after about 2 weeks I can still see the pattern. So I was wondering if anyone could help me with this and if they know what the name for this issue is plus any tips on how to fix it.
Sorry for the huge pic btw but I thought ERA would auto fit images to be a bit smaller so I don't have to embed it?
Does QLED with high nits mean better HDR content than OLEDs? How does HDR look on say Vizio PQ vs OLED?
QLED has better color volume than OLED but OLED infinite contrast will give HDR an edge over QLED hdr brightness in my opinion.
I was confused I thought the higher the nits the better hdr will be. Doesn't OLED stay around 600nits while QLED can go up to 2000nits? thanks
Since OLED has infinite contrast because it can turn off each pixel individually, the HDR looks just as great, if not better in certain instances. Local dimming is great but it can only do so much, 6-700 nit highlights surrounded by absolute, perfect black looks just as impactful as 2000 nits surrounded by a bit of a halo from the backlight. I've owned both and OLED blows everything else away imo.I was confused I thought the higher the nits the better hdr will be. Doesn't OLED stay around 600nits while QLED can go up to 2000nits? thanks
In theory, I guess, but it's not that simple as FALD LED technology cannot compete with OLED on contrast. Deeper blacks will result in a better picture despite the lower NIT countI was confused I thought the higher the nits the better hdr will be. Doesn't OLED stay around 600nits while QLED can go up to 2000nits? thanks
Since OLED has infinite contrast because it can turn off each pixel individually, the HDR looks just as great, if not better in certain instances. Local dimming is great but it can only do so much, 6-700 nit highlights surrounded by absolute, perfect black looks just as impactful as 2000 nits surrounded by a bit of a halo from the backlight. I've owned both and OLED blows everything else away imo.
Not really imo. Regardless of how bright a scene is, it will still have areas of the screen that are meant to be black. The contrast of an OLED is unmatched by anything, nothing else has that contrast and pop. I've owned quite a few HDR displays over the past 3 years and currently own LED and OLED and the contrast of the OLED still wows me on a daily basis.You are describing a very specific type of scene where there is a bright object next to complete black, but that's not the entirety of HDR. Sure, you have things like star fields or headlights at night. But quite a lot of HDR scenes are bright outdoor shots during the day time. For those scenes you would be better off having the 2000-nit brightness and being able to preserve highlight detail.
Regardless of how bright a scene is, it will still have areas of the screen that are meant to be black.
I haven't had this come up on my A1 + receiver, but doing a search on google it appears someone on one of the reddits said clearing the google play tv & movies cache made it go away for them.Anyone with a Sony Bravia TV - how do I disable it so the "Set up your sources" screen doesn't keep coming up every time I turn off a Bravia select source (such as PS4 Pro or Apple TV 4K).
That's not how content is color graded though. Movies, shows, and videogames are all color graded to have true black values even in bright scenes, no shadow crush. The vast majority of content will have true black in shadow detail, articles of clothing, street signs, fine texture detail, hair, cars, it's everywhere.I don't know about that. If you are outdoors on a sunny day, there is not really anything that is completely pitch black. There may be dark shadows, but they are not zero-nit deep space black, they're dark grey. If things are being displayed as pitch black, that's probably shadow crush.
Copper definitely solves the problem of availability since it is a plentiful metal worldwide. Iridium, on the other hand, is found in only a few places—mostly South Africa and parts of Asia.
The most widely-accepted hypothesis that explains iridium's scarcity and its origins is that it traveled here on a meteor—the same one that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
Unless another meteor like that hits Earth, iridium will continue to dwindle in supply. Demand for it is only increasing as smartphones, TVs and other devices that feature OLED screens gain popularity
We'll all die, but the next dominant life form on Earth will have really cool televisions.
Wonder how many metorite strikes we'll need to get that Perfect TV
Are there 4k TVs in the 42-50" range that can do real 120hz and don't cost an arm and a leg? Or a reliable site you can search by this spec?
Right now the only one I'm finding is the Sony X900F (XBR49X900F). Looks like it has good input lag at 1080p120 and 4k60, middling input lag at 1080p60 (~40ms). $1000 isn't horrible, but definitely a premium over 60 hz sets at this size.
Have an Xbox One S (can play UHD movies), OG PS4, and a good gaming PC (it's not going to push 4k at high fps, but I don't want to limit it to 60hz @ 1080p, when I do hook it up to the TV). Will probably get a PS4 Pro or Xbox One X at some point.
Has anyone noticed audio delay in Apex Legends on PS4, arc from LG B7 to AVR? When I fire the weapon in the game, it seems like there is a little bit of delay in the gun shot audio vs the animation of the guns recoil. Unsure if it's the game or the tv arc to avr situation. I haven't noticed the issue with any other game, but I haven't played many shooters on the PS4.
This is pretty common with this TV, in my experience. There is a slight delay with the sound, especially when TV is game mode. Switching the PS4 output to DTS as opposed to Dolby Digital helped me, you can also try using an optical cable instead of ARC or even setting the output to PCM. Good luck.
Awesome thanks. I have it set to Dolby Digital, I'll try DTS. From my understanding, the TV can't pass through PCM 5.1 to the AVR, it will take a PCM signal, but only output it as 2.1. Do you have an insight on that?
Correct, if you don't have rear speakers this is probably the best choice and is how I use to run it until my Linker mucked things up. I'd have to double check but I think optical cable and DTS finally fixed the issue for me (at least on my crappy soundbar).
I have a 5.1 system so I'd like to use all the speakers, I'll try DTS tonight. I believe the Nintendo Switch only outputs audio via PCM, explains why I only get 2.1 audio out of that system.
This is pretty common with this TV, in my experience. There is a slight delay with the sound, especially when TV is game mode. Switching the PS4 output to DTS as opposed to Dolby Digital helped me, you can also try using an optical cable instead of ARC or even setting the output to PCM. Good luck.
thats annoying. does eARC solve this? i hate audio sync issues, but eagerly want a C9
Yup my b7 has hdmi arc audio delay issues with my vizio soundbar as well. Then again the tcl p607 i had a year ago also had the same issue so I was never sure on whether or not it was the tv or the soundbar.
You can tell there is a delay just by navigating the PS4 home screen tiles. I couldn't really tell a difference between DD5.1 and DTS. None of the audio sync options on the tv or soundbar could mitigate it. The only way I've been able to get around it is using optical for audio or PCM but my soundbar system has rears so I rather deal with the compressed audio than losing 5.1.
i'm not sure. if it did, it still didn't eliminate it completely as i still noticed it
So it appears DTS has less audio lag than Dolby via arc to the AVR. Used the PS4 menu to test it out. No idea how or why this would be the case, maybe LG's Dolby codec handling sucks, idk.
Finally used the X900F after the latest android tv update and its such a massive improvement overall, Apple TV is still much better, but now going into the TVs settings is not a painful experience at all.