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#181 | ||
Special Member
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Side note: It's always great to see your name pop up across message boards and reviews and such. I've been a fan since the days of Home Theater SPoT! We even played a few games together on Xbox 360 back in the day... |
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Thanks given by: | Kris Deering (05-23-2017), zmarty (05-24-2017) |
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#182 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I dunno about the OPPO but I've done some fiddlin' with it (hey, it's me!) on the Panny and what's interesting is that it enables the ZD9 to fully resolve the 10,000-nit ramp on the Sony discs if I push it to +5, however this then has the effect of lowering luminance at about 60% brightness and above, so instead of getting that steep EOTF curve it becomes a more relaxed incline, still plenty bright but nowhere near the brightness that it should be.
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#183 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Kris, any thoughts on this as I am considering moving to an RS400 to get custom curves, thanks. |
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#184 |
Power Member
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I'd be curious to know where the Dolby Vision VS. HDR performance will fall on the 65ZD9 considering where it falls on the HDR graph here vs a reference monitor.
http://hometheaterhifi.com/wp-conten...image39-lg.jpg http://hometheaterhifi.com/technical...urrent-issues/ |
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#185 | |
Special Member
May 2017
Earth v1.1, awaiting v2.0
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#186 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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People sometimes say that a 4K OLED has 8 million 'zones' i.e. pixels that can be turned on and off at will and it's pleasing to see that the OLEDs track the performance of the 1000-nit reference so well, but then they generally would given that it's an OLED too! But it's the OLED's mapping of >1000 nit highlights that's the bigger issue, and seeing as three studios routinely put out >1000-nit UHD discs it would be interesting to see such a graph plotted against the 4000-nit Dolby Pulsar with those displays and some 2017 models too. |
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Thanks given by: | grodd (05-24-2017) |
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#188 | |
Power Member
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Personally for me my favorite looking TV's are the LG Oled's and the 65ZD9. |
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#190 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Which, as Geoff has said, they should have launched the format with. I maintain that those with a good "HDR Premium" set don't need to drool too much over dynamic metadata, but considering the flood of various other displays on the market it's crazy there was no standardized method of dealing with that on day one.
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Thanks given by: | aetherhole (05-24-2017), Geoff D (05-24-2017) |
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#191 |
Blu-ray Baron
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And not only with manufacturers, just crazy one studio is mastering to 1000 nits and another at 4000 nits.
I guess one could say, well BDs were mastered at various gammas which is true - but that is something that should have been learned from when releasing a new format. |
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#192 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I have the mastered in 4k version. I previously had the not mastered in 4k version. I feel like I want the 4k but don't need it as the current version is so sharp. I think the only improvement will be HDR. If I can get it for the right price I can sell the old version and get the new on for a few dollars more but at $23 it's too much. I got both Ghostbusters movies for $14.99 on Amazon when they matched BB. I want this to be $14.99. That's the sweet spot for a rerelease of a rerelease. If it gets to within a dollar two of that I'll jump. If not, I'll wait. Anyone think it'll drop in price soon? How much better do you think the new version will be versus the previous one?
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#193 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#194 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I have the old remastered US BD (not the mastered in 4K), and decided to have a look at it on my UHD Premium set up.
The PQ was excellent, and the Dolby True HD 5.1 audio upmix, was reference quality. The 4K disc of TFE, should be an absolute stunner. Right up there with the best catalog titles, such as Pacific Rim and Lucy. |
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#195 | |
Power Member
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Thanks given by: | aetherhole (05-24-2017) |
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#196 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But that's exactly my point Kris: it's the mapping OF the 4000-nit content in particular that's letting the side down. You say it should be pretty easy but it's a damned shame that people like yourself weren't involved with the display manufacturers from the start so that projectors, low-nit LCDs and OLEDs weren't hamstrung by their 'out of the box' HDR performance.
Vincentric mentioned all the tweaking I did with the Panny SDR conversion over the past year but that's NOTHING compared to all the stuff done by the projector cognoscenti in creating all these custom curves and whatnot, which for me begs the question as to WHY some of the manufacturers were so ill-equipped to deal with it. |
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#197 |
Power Member
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I think they were ill equipped to deal with it because most manufacturers are spending their time building the displays and what not and aren't used to the idea of having to create some way of making the video look good. Video playback is typically defined by standards that show you how to deal with video. You can then extrapolate other ways (make it brighter, bigger color gamut) to make it look "different" which some like or dislike, but it wasn't big science. With tone mapping there is literally no standard to do it. So some just went the easy way and clipped at their peak output, others decided to use a roll off. But creating that roll off involves testing and trial and error, and most display manufacturers had HDR displays on the market before there was even content to look at, so then they had to figure it out with real content all the while supporting the current product and developing the next. You'll get the companies that will say it looks good enough and the companies that will actually put the effort in. LG is really disappointing because they support DV but don't use the DV tone mapping for HDR10 content, which would completely solve their tone mapping issues. Vizio has this option. But LG said they didn't want to do what other companies are doing, which is ridiculous as the only way anything should be done is the RIGHT way, and it would be right with the DV tone map. Hopefully Sony will continue to get it right and go that route if and when they update their sets to DV, but their current tone map is already fantastic. I've heard Panasonic's is good too, but that display is not available here in the states.
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#198 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Right, which is why I've said before that even some kind of generic industry-approved tone map (which could map the content to set increments of nits, say) would've been better than nothing, instead it became the wild HDR west as they all set out to do their own thing.
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Thanks given by: | Kris Deering (05-24-2017) |
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