Caayn
Member
Pull the trigger. $1300 for a B6 is one hell of a deal.Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
Pull the trigger. $1300 for a B6 is one hell of a deal.Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
There's no issue with HDR input lag on 2016 OLEDs.
Time to stop spreading FUD, guys.
There's no issue with HDR input lag on 2016 OLEDs.
Time to stop spreading FUD, guys.
rtings shows there is though.
Do we need to go over the validity of their OLED readings again?
#1. They had to be told that their initial lag results of the E6 were wrong and needed to be tested again. When they actually took the time to test them correctly, they were accurate.
#2. Their results from the B6 using HDR are make zero sense. (lower lag results in HDR than game mode)
#3. Leo Bodnar doesnt play well with oled, period. (Quote from the person who actually did the testing on the b6, e6, c6, ef9500)
What about LG themselves though? If this is all fud then why didn't they issue any statement or update regarding HDR and gaming?
Do we need to go over the validity of their OLED readings again?
#1. They had to be told that their initial lag results of the E6 were wrong and needed to be tested again. When they actually took the time to test them correctly, they were accurate.
#2. Their results from the B6 using HDR are make zero sense. (lower lag results in HDR than game mode)
#3. Leo Bodnar doesnt play well with oled, period. (Quote from the person who actually did the testing on the b6, e6, c6, ef9500)
Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
That sounds very suspicious to me.
Is it a reputable seller?
No experience, but if you read reviews, and BBB complaints they are shady as fuck. You can be our guinea pig if you want to try them.My aging Kuro is needing a factory reset every week or two. Looking at the LG OLED models and wondering if ECTV is legit. Any experiences with them?
So I'm thinking about bying the 55B6 but I don't really have 4k content right now.
How do 1080p games look on it? Are they blurry?
Can anyone speak to the quality of the Sony xbr65x930d? Looking at picking this up for $2500 for gaming, HDR, and 3d primarily
There is no proof of burn in being widespread on OLED TVs, but you know that already since it is pretty much common knowledge.
Also
The 32ms input delay on a G6 OLED is not the same as 32ms delay on an LED/LCD TV since the pixel response time is a few orders of magnitude faster on OLED because of the nature of the technology.
Unless you are Daigo/ J. Wong and are skilled enough to count frames on SFV and/or have the reflexes of Ted Williams, the "slow input delay" of the 2016 LG OLEDs is just an overblown narrative propagated by an Internet culture of cynics who don't even own these TVs.
Formulate your own opinion based on experience. We will all be better off for it.
BTW, I am also subject to this rule.
Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
Regarding OLED image retention, I visited my friend who just bought a 65" C6 this weekend. We were playing The Witness, and there was image retention after every puzzle. You could see the puzzle grid on the screen for about 30 seconds after each one. The TV is very new though (like 4 days old), and I'm assuming that image retention lessens over time, but it was pretty distracting.
Regarding OLED image retention, I visited my friend who just bought a 65" C6 this weekend. We were playing The Witness, and there was image retention after every puzzle. You could see the puzzle grid on the screen for about 30 seconds after each one. The TV is very new though (like 4 days old), and I'm assuming that image retention lessens over time, but it was pretty distracting.
I've had an E6 for a week now, no issues. TV likely hasn't been used enough for a break in period? Did you try turning it on and off and seeing if that cleared it?
Found a 55" B6 on sale for ~$1300, I think I'm finally gonna pull the trigger. I'm in the market for a new TV and it feels kinda pointless to get even a standard 4K at this point.
More than eyes, it's something you feel.My parents got the B6 over the weekend and I went over to set it up.
So envious. It's just a whole new level. The Best Buy sales guy convinced my mom to get a Xbox One S as well, stunning. Wish Horizon 3 was out so I could test HDR. Didn't notice too much input delay, but I'm not a competitive gamer with eyes trained on that.
Image retention aside, I might be in the market for an LG OLED in the very near future. Originally I was thinking the E6 as I heard it handled motion better, but is there any definitive proof to that? I've seen people claiming that all the panels should be the same. I don't mind the curve (it's considerably less of a curve than my JS9500) and I don't need the speaker, so would the C6 not be a better choice? Not to mention it's a good bit cheaper. Is there any other advantage to getting an E6 over a C6?
This is what I'd like to know. Hopefully it's not East Coast TVs. If I can get the B6 (or maybe C6) for sub-$1500 during Black Friday sales then I'm going to pull the trigger.
How are heat and internal noise levels on these OLEDs?
My Panny plasma is a mini space heater and buzzes audibly on lighter scenes.
I believe picture quality is the same between C and E.
You're right that the curve is very slight which makes me feel better about getting it.
I believe the only things missing out really are the flat panel, and integrated sound bar which is a non-issue for most.
Non-existent
Non-existent
 Edge LED TV coolness, this is not.
 Edge LED TV coolness, this is not.Regarding OLED image retention, I visited my friend who just bought a 65" C6 this weekend. We were playing The Witness, and there was image retention after every puzzle. You could see the puzzle grid on the screen for about 30 seconds after each one. The TV is very new though (like 4 days old), and I'm assuming that image retention lessens over time, but it was pretty distracting.
Literally not witnessed any image retention whatsoever on my B6, no HUDs or anything. Seems odd.
That's a good read
"OLED TVs top our charts for 4k HDR gaming and the LG B6 is the best of them. The picture quality is great for HDR with its deep blacks and wide color gamut.
Note: The input lag in HDR is inconsistent on both the LG B6 and the E6 and it varies in time. If you care about input lag, you should skip OLED."
No, not on the right track - you already reached your destination.Alright Gaf, I need some help. I'm in the market for an OLED TV, but I'm not sure what to get. I'm seriously eyeing the oled65b6p by LG. I don't really want a curved screen, nor do I want 3D. Am I on the right track?

Feeling mighty good about my KS8000.
I read that the model numbers between NA and EU don't match so:
USA KS9500 = EU KS9000
USA KS9000 = EU KS8000
USA KS8500 = EU KS7500
USA KS8000 = EU KS7000
So your KS8000 is a EU KS7000. If you are EU than your EU KS8000 = USA KS9000 which is the best TV released by Samsung this year.
 I'm in the U.S. and rtings is rating the U.S. KS8000 -- which I own. It's obvious based on the fact they are an American website and the stand design is distinct.
 I'm in the U.S. and rtings is rating the U.S. KS8000 -- which I own. It's obvious based on the fact they are an American website and the stand design is distinct.I'm awareI'm in the U.S. and rtings is rating the U.S. KS8000 -- which I own. It's obvious based on the fact they are an American website and the stand design is distinct.

Yes I know and it was from rtings comment in the youtube review about the US KS 8000 that they mentioned that : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqb_8r-JDbg
I just mentioned that in case there are some confusions.

^The only real concern I have regarding OLED input lag is the missing/not trustworthy data on lag in 4K HDR settings.
That is going to be the case for a lot of TVs including flagship ones.
Sony's ZD9 has a response time of 45ms at it's quickest (Game mode), with regular material and a whopping 98ms in Cinema mode. If HDR adds lag to the set they were even using to demo the new Playstation, then it's clear that just buying a high-end TV might not be enough to secure future-proofing.
If anything if input lag is a thing you care about then high end sets are not really your thing.That is going to be the case for a lot of TVs including flagship ones.
Sony's ZD9 has a response time of 45ms at it's quickest (Game mode), with regular material and a whopping 98ms in Cinema mode. If HDR adds lag to the set they were even using to demo the new Playstation, then it's clear that just buying a high-end TV might not be enough to secure future-proofing.
