And if it gets burn in, don't be cheap and just buy another one.OLED and never look back
Well, you did buy the best QLED on the market. QN90A and B are as good as it gets in the mini LED market. Unfortunately the QN90C got a major downgrade with its ADS panel. Gained viewing angle but lost contrast.
Truth. I've got an OLED tablet that has transformed reading comics. Mike Mignola's Hellboy is stunning with the deep blacks of an OLED screen.OLED just makes everything better, the Switch, OG Vita, iPhones, etc. all better with OLED.
It's visibly choppy for anything low fps. TV and movies absolutely need interpolation, otherwise that "30fps is a slideshow" gamer's complain becomes a sad reality. But even interpolation isn't a complete solution. Anime and cartoons, for example, actually look even worse with interpolation. Having to change motion settings to accommodate every different content was driving me even crazier, especially because the motion settings are quite deep in LG's menu.What was it about the motion that you didn't like?
These LGs do not get very bright as I had the 27" and now the 45" ultrawide and even with the latest firmware it only raised its brightness about 9 nits.
I had a c9. Got a qn90b 65". Never going back to oled. The risk of burn in doesn't worth for gaming. The black diff is minimum with right settings on qn90b. Hdr on qn90b is in another league compared to c9.
I agree with you both for my main TV I would never pick just an OLED because I tend to leave it on a lot where static images are displayed plus I need the overall brightness higher battling the natural sunlight coming into my houseSony 85" X95K LED (uses a QD panel)
2000 nit highlights
800 nit full screen
100hz and 120hz BFI
Reasons not to go OLED: I use it 16 hours a day for work and entertainment, OLED is way to riskey with my static work desktop. I love intense bright HDR and don't like brightness limiting algorithms that reduces the risk of burn in . This year's LG MLA panels doesn't support 120hz BFI only 60hz which is a absolute no go once you're used to 120hz BFI.
I'm not hating on OLED and eventually this tech or similar will be able to do intense 2000+ nit HDR without dimming or worry of burn in, but we are not there for my type of use case.
Yeah, I hope flagship OLED TVs start taking advantage of DSC so we can get 240Hz at 4K on HDMI 2.1.Not in motion. Watch sports on an oled or led and you'll see the difference immediately.
I didn't know Hisense was releasing an update. I've heard some great things about the U8HThe two high end 4K LCDs to consider this year are Samsung's QN95C and Hisense's U8K. Samsung dropped the ball on the QN90C because they don't consider it a flagship TV, and they are in the OLED business now.
This is the model I'm eyeing.Hisense U8H 65inch that cost me $800. Coming in at #3 at RTings in HDR Movies and HDR Gaming.
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I mean its great for PC, but for consoles, we have been going back and forth about 30 FPS taking front-center on the current gen, lol. We'll probably see 240hz in the near future (think there has been a monitor released recently with that), but its utterly pointless for 99% of gamers.Yeah, I hope flagship OLED TVs start taking advantage of DSC so we can get 240Hz at 4K on HDMI 2.1.
Yes, I know most games can barely take advantage of 120 fps, but 240 Hz is great when you can take advantage.
Funny how when plasma was on the way out, lack of brightness was the main reason OLED was the future. Samsung even did a last run of plasmas (F8500) who at least one reviewer pinned down as "Plasma that looks like OLED".Unless you are in a bright room, OLED is just so much better vs anything else unless you go MicroLED which is major $$$$.
OLED with 120hz BFI is Like 80/90% there. It's a shame manufacturers stopped putting that in last year because it was about as close as any TV tech has come to plasma motion resNot in motion. Watch sports on an oled or led and you'll see the difference immediately.
LCD due crushed blacks on OLED's. I think it's good to "master" for an OLED as usually on LCD's you get more details in the shadows than you get on OLED's. It's pretty problematic.
I disagree. As a tech bracket, it retains every advantage it had 10 years ago, against both LCD and OLED. Disadvantages as well, btw.I'm still on a final gen 3D Panasonic plasma, but not really out of choice. I'm going to transition to QD OLED, but I typically have a rule of waiting 3 generations of a device before buying it. It's getting old, and Plasma has been out classed in pretty much, if not every way.
I would probably go the latter, to be honest.Theres no point in even discussing it unless you want to buy specific old used LCDs.
Crushed blacks on an oled? I remember people complaing about House of the dragon and Mando season 3 ep2 being too dark and not being able to see much, but when I watch on my OLED they looked great, I cant see the problem.
Once you go Nit you can never quit.Once you go black you never go back.![]()
Once you go black you never go back.![]()
Oh that is so untrue to me. I'm rocking a Benq 32" 4K VA LCD HDR with sub 400 nits (so fake HDR as they call it) and it is actually soothing. Plus low lit HDR plays way better with dark games on sunny days. That's all I need. OLEDs burns my eyes in the first place.Once you go Nit you can never quit.
I'm hesitant to get an oled because my wife wants a "frame" like tv displaying art.
I didn't know Hisense was releasing an update. I've heard some great things about the U8H
My parents have a Sony X90k and I'm quite impressed with it. I just can't justify spending oled money when I want something 65"+
This is the model I'm eyeing.
And it would work not have always on to display art of pictures when not in use.
33 people does not care about picture quality
Just because a TV can go bright doesn't mean it has to. It just meanest that it can if you or the content want to. Generally, you don't want anything full screen to be very bright but it's the pop in highlights and light sources that gives you that sparking briliance you are looking for in HDR. You are used to seeing things in everyday life that far exceeds the HDR standard of 10.000 nit without getting blinded let alone 2000 or 1000 nit. At least I have the ability when I want to.Oh that is so untrue to me. I'm rocking a Benq 32" 4K VA LCD HDR with sub 400 nits (so fake HDR as they call it) and it is actually soothing. Plus low lit HDR plays way better with dark games on sunny days. That's all I need. OLEDs burns my eyes in the first place.
I don't know man, it generates so much heat, by the time I'm done watching a movie it's much warmer in my living room, fine for fall and winter, but the spring and summer it's just way too hot. The blacks look fine, but if you have any small white light on a dark background it just smears or has a significant halo. I never notice any motion issues on the portable OLED stuff I have. It's so dim in comparison too, just feel like the image quality isn't what people are on about. When I get a QD OLED I'll do my own comparison, but I really don't think it will be that big of a deal. 120 hz would be nice, I'm on PC, and 4k 120 is pretty nice, I'm about 5-6ft from my tv, with movies I don't really tell a difference, but I can on games for resolution.I disagree. As a tech bracket, it retains every advantage it had 10 years ago, against both LCD and OLED. Disadvantages as well, btw.
Bells and whistles? Sure. you don't have a built in chromecast, 4K, HDR, VRR, high refresh rate and modern state of the art stuff. But it's not as if the tech/panel couldn't handle it, and I'd argue perhaps it doesn't need it, perhaps we don't need it as well. That said, for most of these bells and whistles there's nothing keeping these 2013 panels from being able to do it, other than that, at the time these implementations didn't exist.
At the distance my 65VT60 is, 4K would be redundant. high refresh rate? 60 Hz is honestly fine for this generation; HDR is basically a novelty if the screen doesn't get bright enough. We could go on.
Top range, last generation plasmas are still some of the best TV's ever manufactured, if you test them side by side with OLED you'll be surprised. Image quality wise, motion is comparatively unmatched
I would probably go the latter, to be honest.
I agree with your points, although personally there's another option.
Buy into price/quality and wait until a better product without the caveats surfaces. I believe that was what you were highlighting while speaking about the Hisense U8H or comparable TV set.
In regards to dimming zones, I'm waiting for a "1 dimming zone per each pixel" boom at some point (same thing as saying mini-LED). It'll be a perfect first step towards micro-led building facilities (1 subpixel instead of 3 or 4 means better yields and hopefully cheaper prices) but that's clearly still not this year. Perhaps 2024.
That's the tech I'm most interested in personally. Specially in sets with those panels made by Sony.
Can't you return it?Well I am gutted.Been saving for some time, and last week went out and purchased a Sony A80J OLED. Quick (glance) inspection at the warehouse and it all looked alright. Today, finally had some time so decided to unbox and set it up. After I took it out the box, and put the stands on, The horror! I noticed a circular hairline crack at the bottom centre. My heart sunk. Went to turn it on. Flash of red lines ,then nothing and the red light blinking. Sitting here now. Feels like a real bad dream.
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I would probably go the latter, to be honest.
I agree with your points, although personally there's another option.
Buy into price/quality and wait until a better product without the caveats surfaces. I believe that was what you were highlighting while speaking about the Hisense U8H or comparable TV set.
In regards to dimming zones, I'm waiting for a "1 dimming zone per each pixel" boom at some point (same thing as saying mini-LED). It'll be a perfect first step towards micro-led building facilities (1 subpixel instead of 3 or 4 means better yields and hopefully cheaper prices) but that's clearly still not this year. Perhaps 2024.
That's the tech I'm most interested in personally. Specially in sets with those panels made by Sony.