Just got a 55" Samsung js8500. Will hook it up later in the week. Excited!
Nice one man
Just got a 55" Samsung js8500. Will hook it up later in the week. Excited!
Right but we aren't talking about the backlight alone. We are talking about the pseudo local dimming which causes blacks to fluctuate on low APL scenes, where you have a lot of back and some highlights like gravity being all space an some stars. You can turn it off and the intensity of it to various degrees but the effect is still there unless you have it off completely
So turn off the backlight dimming entirely and you can have a fixed black level. I'm confused as to what the problem is here.
I have a slightly older LG OLED (55ec9300) and I'm absolutely smitten with it. In PC mode I don't really register any input lag and I'd wager it is between 30-40 ms. While initially there was a subtle consistency issue with dark grey it seems to have disappeared with use. Furthermore, do not for a second trust factory picture settings - they are all awful. Once you have it properly tuned though, it's the best dammed picture you'll have seen. I've pretty much sworn off of ever getting a backlit display again as a result.Anyone know what the input lag is on these sets?
Sony Class 4k XBR55X850C 55"
Sony 55X800B
LG 65UF8500
Working on finding them right now but if anyone already has a quick link to the info for these particular sets it would be appreciated. I've heard around here that apparently the best 2015 set for low input lag seems to be a Samsung of all things... any input there?
The Vizio M- and P- series for 2015 seem to have around 20ms input lag according to CNET. That's really good for the price point considering how many zones they have for local dimming as well. Might have to look there until OLEDs come down below 3k for the 4k versions and have better input lag.
Lastly, the Best Buy rep is giving me the typical line of (what I assume is) bullshit that they've "drastically lowered the input lag" on the latest line of LG OLED sets, and that the flat versions will be available in the next few weeks to two months. I highly doubt they've gotten the OLED's input lag down to the sub-20ms range like some of the others, but even sub-30 would be acceptable. Any input lag numbers out on the latest OLEDs? Oh, and their store demo unit of the big 65" or 70" (not sure) OLED had a vertical band that they claim happened during installation when it was damaged. Has me a bit concerned, and they claim they're the only one in the country that got damaged in this manner... sure... right. Any info on the latest OLEDs would be appreciated.
I have a slightly older LG OLED (55ec9300) and I'm absolutely smitten with it. In PC mode I don't really register any input lag and I'd wager it is between 30-40 ms. While initially there was a subtle consistency issue with dark grey it seems to have disappeared with use. Furthermore, do not for a second trust factory picture settings - they are all awful. Once you have it properly tuned though, it's the best dammed picture you'll have seen. I've pretty much sworn off of ever getting a backlit display again as a result.
Lastly, the Best Buy rep is giving me the typical line of (what I assume is) bullshit that they've "drastically lowered the input lag" on the latest line of LG OLED sets, and that the flat versions will be available in the next few weeks to two months.
Check http://www.displaylag.com/display-database/ for input lag numbers.
Hey guys,
So here's the deal.
For several years i've been using several different displays. I had a Samsung plasma, then a projector. Went back to plasma and then back to projector again. Eventually i just decided to be done with it and simply go for HDTV and whether that was going to be a plasma or LCD/LED i don't care.
I've owned a Sony w829b for a while and while it was perfect for the low input lag, the Game picture mode significantly reduces the picture quality. Using the cinema, auto, standard etc, picture modes games look great on it, but the input lag is just too damn much and while fine for games that don't nessecarily need a low input lag, it's impossible for any shooter. I really care a lot about visuals and when Halo 5 and Battlefront come out, i want them to look the best they can, and be playable in terms of input lag.
So now this LG OLED tv has caught my eye, the EC930V. I hear so many good things about it, both here and on other forum and reviews. Apparently it's the best picture you can ask for with amazing black levels and with some tweaking you can have it great for gaming too. So for the owners of that tv here, how much tweaking/calibration is needed? And is that done by a professional calibrator or can i do it myself? How is the tv out of the box in terms of picture quality and for input lag?
I'll be getting the tv for my Xbox One and Wii U, (PS4 next year). I don't have the money yet, saving up for it, but i have my mind set on it for sure. Gonna do my best to have it before Fallout 4 drops.
Any help/advice would be awesome.
I have been in the A/V business most of my adult life...and currently work for a distribution company. My personal opinion is that the LG OLED is overpriced and overrated. It's using a white OLED element for BACKLIGHTING, then running the white light through a traditional LCD panel. While this DOES allow for backlighting of individual pixels, providing really impressive black levels...it is NOT the "holy grail" of displays...and at $7000 ($5999 on sale right now) for a 65" set...it's just not worth the money.
If you are looking for a "top of the line" set with low input lag, go with the UN65JS9500 (for a 65", also available in 78" and 88"). These sets are backlit with traditional LED light elements (which also will not degrade as much over time as OLED elements!), and the 9500 series has ACTIVE backlighting, meaning that the set will selectively light the LEDs depending on what is shown and where on the screen lighting is needed.
While not QUITE as impressive as the black levels of the LG OLED sets, you will find the picture quality stunning, and more than acceptable...and it's selling for $4500 right now. Take the extra $1500 you save and put it into your audio system!
Oh, one more thing...Samsung sets are HARDWARE upgradable! All of your HDMI connections, as well as the processors for the TV, are located in an external "OneConnect" box...so if the industry decides to go with DisplayPort, HDMI 3.0, or whatever else they come up with, you are not going to be left with an obsolete set! You can upgrade your set for a few hundred dollars to whatever the next standard happens to be.
I have been in the A/V business most of my adult life...and currently work for a distribution company. My personal opinion is that the LG OLED is overpriced and overrated. It's using a white OLED element for BACKLIGHTING, then running the white light through a traditional LCD panel. While this DOES allow for backlighting of individual pixels, providing really impressive black levels...it is NOT the "holy grail" of displays...and at $7000 ($5999 on sale right now) for a 65" set...it's just not worth the money.
If you are looking for a "top of the line" set with low input lag, go with the UN65JS9500 (for a 65", also available in 78" and 88"). These sets are backlit with traditional LED light elements (which also will not degrade as much over time as OLED elements!), and the 9500 series has ACTIVE backlighting, meaning that the set will selectively light the LEDs depending on what is shown and where on the screen lighting is needed.
While not QUITE as impressive as the black levels of the LG OLED sets, you will find the picture quality stunning, and more than acceptable...and it's selling for $4500 right now. Take the extra $1500 you save and put it into your audio system!
Oh, one more thing...Samsung sets are HARDWARE upgradable! All of your HDMI connections, as well as the processors for the TV, are located in an external "OneConnect" box...so if the industry decides to go with DisplayPort, HDMI 3.0, or whatever else they come up with, you are not going to be left with an obsolete set! You can upgrade your set for a few hundred dollars to whatever the next standard happens to be.
He's looking at the EC9300 which is $2000 right now. The JS9500 is more than twice as much.
I don't think the OLED sets are overrated at all, I will never go back to LCDAnd in my opinion, putting size aside, FALD sets like the JS9500, or Sony 940C are still not as good as the 1080p OLED. I think with top tier sets like these - it's going to come down to personal preference. I find the blooming artfacts from FALD really annoying. OLED is still not perfect but overall I feel it is the best solution yet.
As for tweaking/calibrating the LG EC9300, mine needed minimal setting changes to get good PQ out of the box... based on the Cinema preset, I had to change the gamma setting, up brightness to 54, and I brought down the OLED light to 55. I also turned off all the extra processing features like noise reduction, super resolution, etc. I plan on getting a professional calibration at some point though, but I think you'll be fine with just basic tweaking.
He's looking at the EC9300 which is $2000 right now. The JS9500 is more than twice as much.
I don't think the OLED sets are overrated at all, I will never go back to LCDAnd in my opinion, putting size aside, FALD sets like the JS9500, or Sony 940C are still not as good as the 1080p OLED. I think with top tier sets like these - it's going to come down to personal preference. I find the blooming artfacts from FALD really annoying. OLED is still not perfect but overall I feel it is the best solution yet.
As for tweaking/calibrating the LG EC9300, mine needed minimal setting changes to get good PQ out of the box... based on the Cinema preset, I had to change the gamma setting, up brightness to 54, and I brought down the OLED light to 55. I also turned off all the extra processing features like noise reduction, super resolution, etc. I plan on getting a professional calibration at some point though, but I think you'll be fine with just basic tweaking.
The biggest problem with OLED's right now is the lack of sizes. We need a 78 - 85" OLED stat.
That sounds good man. Are you using the game or PC mode for low input lag by the way?
I also forgot to mention that next to the Sony W829b, i also temporarily owned a Panasonic Viera TX-55CX700. This is a 4K set, but i honestly couldn't notice it in gaming at all, which makes sense, cause zero Xbox One games are 4K, but i still expected some kind of improvement. Honestly, the Sony W829b was A LOT better in terms of picture quality and black levels than the Panasonic.
Definitely! That's when I'll move to 4K.
PC mode. Did you find the input lag acceptable with the TX-55CX700? The EC9300 is around the same - 34-36ms. Not as low as the Sony but still more than acceptable I feel. 50ms is when things get noticeable for me.
Oh that's absolutely fine. What i loved about the CX700 is that you could enable game mode in every picture preset, but the picture quality in general just wasn't nearing the W829b and i am very picky when it comes to those things.
Ha, I owned the Sony W829b as well before it broke down, and I got the Panasonic 50CX700 as a replacement. To me, the CX700 looks miles better than the W829 in black levels and colours. There are some display differences between the 50 inch and 55 inch versions, so that might explain our difference of opinion, but personally I highly recommend the CX700 for the (relatively) low input lag on all picture presets and overall picture quality.
Edit: thought you (Tatsumi) were someone other than the guy asking for advice, misread it sorry! Seriously though, maybe try the 50 inch version and take some time to properly calibrate it. There's not a whole lot of tv's that have low input lag on all presets, and picture quality is amazing after a little tinkering. Out of box presets are better on the W829 (and on Sony tv's in general).
Definitely! That's when I'll move to 4K.
PC mode. Did you find the input lag acceptable with the TX-55CX700? The EC9300 is around the same - 34-36ms. Not as low as the Sony but still more than acceptable I feel. 50ms is when things get noticeable for me.
Where are you getting 34-36ms? Every review I've seen for the LG OLED 9300 set shows input lag at like 49ms.
Where are you getting 34-36ms? Every review I've seen for the LG OLED 9300 set shows input lag at like 49ms.
Edit: I see that the link above shows it at 36ms, but CNET and other reviews that I've read measured it at 49ms with a LEO Bodnar device. I'm curious how that site got that 36ms number for the OLED.
Multiple answers are possibleWhy go 4K when the current generation of consoles can't reliably produce 1080p ?
Let me tell you right now. Even the next generation of consoles will be nowhere near 4k resolution. I will be glad if next gen can reliably produce AAA games 1080p60. That would be a huge step forward.
There is absolutely no reason to go with anything better than a standard 1080p TV with decent quality for the next 5 years. 4k is the dream that companies tried to sell us before even HD was adopted fully.
So in the 1080p category we have plenty of good options. By now we know how to produce those, just walk into a store and buy what looks good. Always go and watch your choice live somewhere. Impossible to judge a tv on specs alone.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1102205
Thought I'd post this here #noshame. We'll see how these handle motion and input lag.
http://www.soundandvision.com/content/lg-announces-first-hdr-enabled-4k-oled-tv#97ICOl0Oqox49wFR.97
Here we go. Now I gotta consider if OLED is worth transitioning from the Sonys with the extra speakers. I'd have to get an OLED + Receiver + 3.1 system (I don't like soundbars). While Sony I really like the bigger speakers they come with plus a wireless subwoofer.
Yeah did a lot of checking on CNET and saw that it's roughly the same as the previous model. I'm holding out for the 55" flat panel version to go test my gaming setup on it to see how it 'feels' in action.
I just can't help but expect that going from a plasma to an OLED is going to be a very noticeable difference with the input lag, but I guess if the OLED renders the whole image at once in 'passes' the way plasmas do rather than top-to-bottom the way traditional LEDs do then it might compensate for that figure and make it still feel 'fluid' enough. I mean it's not like I game at a competitive level or anything, but shooters and speedrunning platformers sure would suffer if there is any perceptible input lag.
I have a slightly older LG OLED (55ec9300) and I'm absolutely smitten with it. In PC mode I don't really register any input lag and I'd wager it is between 30-40 ms. While initially there was a subtle consistency issue with dark grey it seems to have disappeared with use. Furthermore, do not for a second trust factory picture settings - they are all awful. Once you have it properly tuned though, it's the best dammed picture you'll have seen. I've pretty much sworn off of ever getting a backlit display again as a result.
Gafers i need your help, in my local game store the sellsman told me that 4k tv limits gaming to 30 fps max, can someone confirm me if its bullshit or not?
Gafers i need your help, in my local game store the sellsman told me that 4k tv limits gaming to 30 fps max, can someone confirm me if its bullshit or not?
If you get a sound bar, you don't need to plug in an optical cable. It just runs though the hdmi ARC.
I should be able to do this with my AVR too, right? I can't get it to work so I had to use an optical cable, but I'd rather not if I don't have to...