After seeing a picture of a top of the line Sony 4k playing KI im not so sure I want to swtich my KURO. Might have to wait for OLED
Sony
![]()
Pioneer
![]()
Is the pixel jogger video safe to use on my VT60? Looks really, really trippy.
If it wasn't safe to display video on your TV, then there would be something wrong with your TV and not the video. I've used the pixel jogged a lot on my VT60 to clear IR from long gaming sessions.
It is, that said it tips the ABL in a big way, it's certainly not to be seen (unless you want to have epilepsy) but use it without fear for the panel well being.Is the pixel jogger video safe to use on my VT60? Looks really, really trippy.
I can't stand my TV, it just has one too many problems. So, I'm looking for a new one.
Can any body help me out?
I'm looking for a preferably LED TV that's above 32" but below 42". 40 inch would be great. Preferably Sony or Samsung. I'm thinking of around a budget of $450. I don't know if I would be able to get something decent for that price or not.
It is, that said it tips the ABL in a big way, it's certainly not to be seen (unless you want to have epilepsy) but use it without fear for the panel well being.
It does it's thing, it's just not pleasant. In a lot of senses it's like a full frame hardcore scroll bar; it's good for breaking in and cleaning IR.
Went to a store yesterday to buy a tv. I was in huge doubt between a Sony W905 or a Panasonic VT/GT.
After looking a lot of demo scenes back and forth between the W905 and VT60 it was still a difficult decision.
Colourwise they were very close, the Panasonic being a little bit more pleasing to the eye to watch.
In the end I chose the Sony. The things that made me choose for the Sony:
- Lower price (free tablet Z) for the 55 inch Sony than the Panasonic 55 inch
- Design. Due to the small bezels of the Sony the 50 inch Panasonic is only slighty smaller than the 55 inch Sony.
- No chance of IR
- Less power consumption
- Better performance in a bright room.
I really like the Sony, but to be honest I am still in doubt about the size and whether or not plasma is really that much better. The blacks on the Sony are quite impressive too and I changed the screen settings to 'movie' which gives really nice warm colors.
I still have time to return the Sony, so I am going to test it with different movies/games in the next few days.
I watched Planet Earth and Avatar yesterday and I have to say that the picture quality was stunning.
One question, is there a difference in the way LED and plasma handle lower quality imput? Some tv channels were a bit disappointing to watch, while others were razor sharp.
I'd use custom or normal with contrast on max.Cool, cheers bro. Should I use my calibrated settings for the jogger or stick it on dynamic for extreme cleansing?![]()
After seeing a picture of a top of the line Sony 4k playing KI im not so sure I want to swtich my KURO. Might have to wait for OLED
Sony
![]()
Pioneer
![]()
I'd use custom or normal with contrast on max.
I don't know about dynamic, dynamic is essentially variable peak settings, changing according to the source, I don't know if it can answer as fast as the thing is doing it's white and black patterns, so perhaps it would just defeat it altogether.
After seeing a picture of a top of the line Sony 4k playing KI im not so sure I want to swtich my KURO. Might have to wait for OLED
I'd put down $8,000-$10,000AUD for a display like that (My Kuro cost me $10,000 when I got it.). The sad thing is this is all possible if a manufacture aimed for this..however it seems they are too busy coming up with gimmick (3D) after gimmick (curved screens). It makes me so mad.
I'd use custom or normal with contrast on max.
I don't know about dynamic, dynamic is essentially variable peak settings, changing according to the source, I don't know if it can answer as fast as the thing is doing it's white and black patterns, so perhaps it would just defeat it altogether.
Right, will do. Not sure if you remember but you very kindly helped me out a while back with some persistent IR. I should really get a pic of it actually, so give me a couple of minutes, but how long should I leave jogger on for to clear it?
Scroll up, I answered your question.
How long? Until it's clear. That's all. Every panel is different, and if you've been burning it in there a long time, it might take a long time to clear. Plasma display panels fundamentally work by burning themselves up like the Sun, and if you've been burning one thing awhile it's going to require burning another thing for awhile until you've equalized the relative amounts of burning, so to speak.
I usually check for IR on a full 50% grey frame.As for how long it takes, well as long as it takes until you can't see the IR anymore on a straight white frame. Just pause the pixel jogger on a white frame and examine the TV closely for signs of IR.
I remember.Right, will do. Not sure if you remember but you very kindly helped me out a while back with some persistent IR. I should really get a pic of it actually, so give me a couple of minutes, but how long should I leave jogger on for to clear it?
if it's pale in the outlines (hard to explain, but you check that over a full white or grey frame) it shouldn't be too bad.edit: Right, pic is below. To be clear, I'm not sure if it's permanent but it hasn't cleared since it appeared, although this is probably because it's coming from my Xbox One, which I use all the time, so the logo appears frequently — but briefly. The IR is pale but certainly noticeable on light content.
I usually check for IR on a full 50% grey frame.
if it's pale in the outlines (hard to explain, but you check that over a full white or grey frame) it shouldn't be too bad.
So anyone care to comment on the 3D capabilities of the VT/ZT Panasonics or 4K tvs in general?
So far I've watched Pacific Rim, Star Trek Into Darkness, Iron Man 3, and Tron: Legacy. Honestly, it looks stunning on the VT. Full resolution, with inky blacks and incredible z-axis depth both ways. It's far better than 3D in the cinema, at least for me.
Only complaints are the supplied glasses seem to eat up battery pretty quickly and it's a bit easier to see dithering in darker scenes.
Crosstalk is good but seems to vary across titles. Iron Man 3 has a lot of it. Star Trek and Pacific Rim have a bit, but Tron has none.
It is a lot more revealing on my VT60.Is that more revealing for IR than a 100% white frame?
Awesome...so I can get through one or two movies on one charge right? Also I don't really know what crosstalk is...care to elaborate?
Thanks.
Imax, if you can check the TV with a full frame of that.
They're very good, but 3D is "experimental" tech implemented on top of the panels and existing tech and thus it has to conform to them, not really the other way around for the most part, even if parts can be done to be better performing to accommodate it... To an extent.So anyone care to comment on the 3D capabilities of the VT/ZT Panasonics or 4K tvs in general?
The problem I've seen with my VT60 in the limited 3D viewing attempts I've made is that there just isn't enough brightness with the ABL limits, the THX 3D Cinema preset I used while putzing around with it is locked at Contrast 100 and it's still a pretty dim picture. Plus at Contrast 100 the ABL kicks in constantly and causes distracting brightness shifts.
I'm sure a 4K LCD, taking into account the inherent limits of LCD, can easily get much brighter than the VT60 and really no one should even give a crap about 4K 3D content when 1080p 3D content is so limited in the first place. A 4K LCD has the ability to show 1080p 3D with full resolution simply by alternating scanlines and it can do so with just passive 3D glasses and that's a much simpler solution than the active 3D with alternating frames required on 1080p panels of any kind, plasma or LCD.
None of this matters that much though, as the 3D gimmick seems to have run it's course on the home theater side and we're seeing growing disinterest in it from the manufacturers as consumers have just not responded favorably to it so far. It's possible the 4K LCDs, which dramatically simplify the costs and effort required for 3D cinema at home, will reignite consumer interest because they aren't as complicated. But 3D just hasn't caught on at home, and I'm not predicting that will change much. People seem to like going to movie theaters for 3D cinema but don't want to futz around with it at home.
is ABL mandatory? I just realized why I was having that brightness issue and it makes sense that ABL is causing that shift in brightness.
As much as I love my 60" Pioneer Kuro they are no good for playing fighting games on due to the input lag.
Using the Leo Bodnar Input Lag tester one user on shmups forum got 53.8ms input delay on his 5010FD which is about right.
As for the 4K LCD's the most stunning one I have seen is the Panasonic it's also the most future proof one at the moment (won't be long as the new 4K displays role in) with support for HDMI 2.0.
My dream TV right now would have to be:
- OLED min 65" (Not curved)
- 4K
- Amazing motion resolution
- Input lag of under 16ms (tested with Leo Bodnar 1080p source)
I'd put down $8,000-$10,000AUD for a display like that (My Kuro cost me $10,000 when I got it.). The sad thing is this is all possible if a manufacture aimed for this..however it seems they are too busy coming up with gimmick (3D) after gimmick (curved screens). It makes me so mad.
In order to meet the increasingly stringent US and European energy consumption standards, ABL was implemented on plasma TVs a number of years ago. Plasma is a self-illuminating technology, unlike LCD which has a backlight that's always on. So the PDP is consuming the most energy when showing a white frame, when all subpixels are illumated at maximum brightness. OLED works the same way, but at a dramatically lower energy consumption and heat emitted. The OLED panel on your phone uses more energy while showing a white screen than a black one, in theory both PDPs and OLED displays use no power when showing a black screen beyond the supporting electronics.
The ABL limits the brightness of the picture based on the amount of energy being consumed, so you can easily see this by showing a 50% white/50% black frame split any way you like, and then a 100% white frame. The 50/50 frame will have a much brighter white side then the 100 white frame.
One reason plasma has been dying is the manufacturers have aggressively researched ways to increase panel efficiency but it has not been keeping up with the yearly changes to Energy Star (US) and TCO (EU) standards. This is why if you are to put up a 100% white frame on a plasma TV today, you will have only 40% of the panel's theoretical maximum brightness as limited by the ABL. That's right, 40%.
Note that a 100% white frame, limited to 40% of the panel's theoretical peak brightness, still sucks ~430W of power from the wall. The equivalent LED-sidelit LCD HDTV uses less than 100W of power to light it's efficient LED side-lights.
Remember that power consumption (and heat emitted) increases as a square of pixel density. Now imagine how much power a 4K plasma would consume, and how hot it would get. Yup, that's why there aren't going to be any 4K plasmas.
Anyone that buys a 4K TV right now is insane. $5K for a TV whose main feature has next to zero support ? You're basically going to end up like the HD early adopters. 5years after they bought their $12k TV with 1 HDMI port (if they're lucky), HD content finally starts rolling out, and now, sets that make yours look like a hot turd are selling for 1/8 the price and come with 4 HDMI ports.
Even OLED right now isn't as tempting as it should be. Curved screens have got to be the dumbest gimmick I've seen in a while, especially on anything smaller than 80".
EDIT: However, it does seem that ABL is far more of an issue with active 3D. I'm not sure what it is, but I can definitely see when the panel changes its brightness.
Ah, that makes perfect sense as to why Dnice's white slide would come off as a grey shade. It's unfortunate that that type of energy restriction is in place. It's odd, though, I never noticed it on my old 2009 Panny plasma. Perhaps I never paid attention to it.
EDIT: However, it does seem that ABL is far more of an issue with active 3D. I'm not sure what it is, but I can definitely see when the panel changes its brightness.
In order for active 3D to work, you need to show 2 frames in the frame where you show one, and the active glasses do the work to direct each subframe to each eye. However this cuts brightness by 50%, since you are showing 2 frames at once but only directing the light from one subframe to each eye.
So to have exactly the same brightness in 3D that you do in 2D, you need to double the panel's brightness. That's impossible with ABL limiting peak brightness of the panel.
ABL will be more obvious on a full white screen vs a windowed pattern or presentation.
If brightness and whites are you thing, get rid of the Panny and pick up a Samsung Plasma. The colors are a little better on the Samsung also but you'll lose out on black levels.
At this point, I'd wait on CES in a couple of days to see if any Samsung is going to just do a rebadge or come out with something awesome for their plasma line.
ABL will be more obvious on a full white screen vs a windowed pattern or presentation.
If brightness and whites are you thing, get rid of the Panny and pick up a Samsung Plasma. The colors are a little better on the Samsung also but you'll lose out on black levels.
At this point, I'd wait on CES in a couple of days to see if any Samsung is going to just do a rebadge or come out with something awesome for their plasma line.
No doubt about that. But people will give a crap - anyone buying a 4K set is looking forward, so 4K 3D or the ability to pull it... matters.I'm sure a 4K LCD, taking into account the inherent limits of LCD, can easily get much brighter than the VT60 and really no one should even give a crap about 4K 3D content when 1080p 3D content is so limited in the first place.
Not that simple, passive is certainly attractive from a easy and cheap point of view, but...A 4K LCD has the ability to show 1080p 3D with full resolution simply by alternating scanlines and it can do so with just passive 3D glasses and that's a much simpler solution than the active 3D with alternating frames required on 1080p panels of any kind, plasma or LCD.
The problem is the glasses and lack of 3D sources/standards for regular TV emission. Blu-ray didn't take off for the masses, so if you wanted 3D to be a selling point TV channels had to have that option in a transparent way (and not a side by side, half resolution HD channel at that).None of this matters that much though, as the 3D gimmick seems to have run it's course on the home theater side and we're seeing growing disinterest in it from the manufacturers as consumers have just not responded favorably to it so far. It's possible the 4K LCDs, which dramatically simplify the costs and effort required for 3D cinema at home, will reignite consumer interest because they aren't as complicated. But 3D just hasn't caught on at home, and I'm not predicting that will change much. People seem to like going to movie theaters for 3D cinema but don't want to futz around with it at home.
So anyone care to comment on the 3D capabilities of the VT/ZT Panasonics or 4K tvs in general?
Oh yeah, easily. They don't charge though, they use watch batteries.
Crosstalk is basically seeing a faint ghost of the 'other' half of the 3D image through one of the lenses. Usually it's very noticeable when there's 3D subtitles on the screen (Pacific Rim has a bunch of these) and it looks like you're seeing double.
The best 3d you can get right now, imho is a Sony 4k 900a set. 3d is truly incredible on this set and really blows anyone that watches a 3d movie at my house away.
What are some of your go-to movies to show off 3D on the set? The only 3D I've tried on mine was actually Uncharted 3, which was surprisingly cool. Going to try Puppeteer later since I hear that's really awesome as far as games go.
Also, while on the subject, can you use the W900A for nVidia 3D Vision? I'm assuming not, since I know a TV's refresh rate is somehow not the same as a monitor's refresh rate, but that'd be rad. Currently have the W900A hooked up to my receiver with the PC as one of the inputs, and it functions as a giant third monitor... PC gaming on the thing is awesome. Lower resolution (PC display is a Dell u3011) but I could not give a shit because it looks amazing and runs better due to the drop in resolution.
Hi, Pro displays have no ABL, even the newer ones; they're also stuck on 8192 steps of gradation at best (against the 30720 on the VT60); your panel has 3072 steps btw.Does anyone here have any experience with older Panasonic pro displays and how they stack up to the VT60, particularly as it relates to brightness and latency?
I've been using a Panasonic 42PH9UK panel since the end of 2006. I game heavily on it, though I don't do a lot of online/twitch gaming on my consoles (I save most of that for my PC). I still get some IR on my set, but no long term burn-in. I don't know what the input lag is on the 9UK versus Panny's newer models. I always assumed mine wasn't terrible since it was a pro display, but I seem to recall having to calibrate for Rock Band because the delay was notable. The ABL on the newer sets concern me more than anything else, if only because my friends I play a lot of NHL on the Xbox.
Since the Panasonic plasmas will soon be gone, I'm really waffling about whether or not I should take the plunge. I realize that Samsung will continue manufacturing plasmas, but I'm not sure if they'll come close to matching the 60" VT60's current value within the next 4 to 6 months, and I'd like to upgrade before summer.
As an aside, while I've always preferred the look of plasma versus LCD, I will admit that the Sony W900A also looks very good, and the low latency is undeniably impressive. Unfortunately, it is 5" smaller and costs $200 more, but I'll definitely be keeping an eye on Sony's sets in the future.
Meh... Tech always gets cheaper, but flagship models do not...If it's not your cash, then it shouldn't really bother you. If anything buying a 4K tv before CES next week could be an argument, but you're still within the 30 days return policy so people are still straight.
And Gimmicky gets thrown around WAYYYY to much while speaking about tech people don't agree with.
Hi, Pro displays have no ABL, even the newer ones; they're also stuck on 8192 steps of gradation at best (against the 30720 on the VT60); your panel has 3072 steps btw.
That is a 1024×768 panel, so it's direct heritage is the X60 set this year and they're known to be not as bright as other Panasonic plasmas; I don't think you have much to worry about said transition tbh, there's no measurements to be had over the web (and plasmas have gotten dimmer over the years) but I believe the VT60 should match or surpass that peak white, it also has a anti-glare and constrast filter which your set lacks, that helps quite a bit too... do you game in a well lit room?
In regards to input lag, 2006 and a pro panel no less, I'd expect it to be 16,7 ms since every panel in that less processing heavy era did deliver that. Panasonic pro plasma line is prepared to be used as monitors too, no less.
I love those professional plasmas btw.