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#1 |
Active Member
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Hello folks,
I've watched over 120+ different titles on my OLED 65" B6. And previously prior to jumping into my OLED, I owned a 75" 4K (Non HDR) TV. And to be perfectly frank, there are maybe 5-10 titles that actually stand out. Where you can really see the detail, the grain, the film-like 4K beauty. The rest look as good as a good Blu-ray. Maybe I have a short term memory, but I don't recall 1080p Blu-rays looking much worse than over half of the 4K UHD's. I figure, I most likely need a larger television from the distance I'm sitting. Would I be better off going to a 75 - 86" 4K HDR TV or look into a 4K Projector where you can easily go 120". I have not heard many people on these forums talk about 4K HDR Projectors, probably because they only became affordable in the last few months. For anyone that has experience, can you share your thoughts/opinions. Some people might sit close enough to see their 65" TV's but I think it is simply too small for my space. Thanks in advance for your comments and advice, and I did look through for a topic about this but did not see one preexisting. |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Champion
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If you can’t see a difference on an OLED maybe sell it and get a cheaper 1080p projector. I went from a 5030ub that I calibrated monthly on 110” screen and the difference for me is staggering. I’ll take quality for size any day of the week but most people prefer a large screen. People thought I was crazy for selling my projector and screen but their opinion didn’t matter to me since I was the one watching it. Rod is right though, unless you have a completely dark room and go the extra step and paint your ceiling and walls black there is no point getting a projector.
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#5 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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If HDR isn't making any appreciable difference to your viewing and it's just resolution you're after then going to a bigger screen won't really help any as most 4K discs come off of 2K masters anyway. Not that there can't still be appreciable differences, which I can clearly see when directly comparing UHDs to BDs on my own 65" TV (sitting about 6/7 feet away), but we all see things differently according to what our expectations are.
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#6 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#8 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#9 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() TVs are basically plug and play, projectors are a whole new ball game. Never mind that HDR with a projector will not look the same as on a TV. |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Champion
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You will still get a good picture from a good projector with white walls but painting the ceiling and walls black will make a substantial difference. I had mine done this time last year when I had my Epson 5030ub which had a great image with a white ceiling but once I painted the side walls and ceiling it was in a different league altogether. Painting living room black is obviously a different story. There is nothing better than watching a movie in a completely dark room whether you have a panel or projector. Even with my OLED I'm glad I painted half my room black. It really adds to the experience and my OLED completely disappears into the room.
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#11 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Unfortunately treating the entire (or even half) the living room with black velvet for example is not an option and neither is painting a part of the ceiling and walls black. As you probably can imagine, the missus was not having that! ![]() ![]() |
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#14 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#15 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#16 |
Blu-ray Champion
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lol, Well where I'm getting married is about an hour outside of Montreal. We are in the midst of planning the midnight snack and that is high on the possibility list. That or a smoke meat station... I want to put smoke meat on the poutine.
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (05-13-2018) |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Go with the projector if you can. Projectors give you that true home theater experience. Although the TV will win with PQ, it's not really that much of a difference and the PJ is more immersive IMO. I own 3 4k TVs, but when it's movie night, it's all about the projector and mines is "only" 1080p. It's an even better experience on the 4k projectors I've demoed like the JVCs and Sonys.
It does help to have your room treated with dark colored walls/curtains. I'm lucky to have an all black dedicated home theater, but as others have stated, I wouldn't go painting the living room black. Also note that projectors require proper placement, filter cleaning, and replacing expensive bulbs. With that said, I wouldn't trade it for anything. Posting a pic of your room would also be helpful. There really isn't too much PJ discussion here, but you can learn a lot on the AVS forum. Good luck with your decision! Last edited by Dirk504; 05-11-2018 at 04:47 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | LettuceJUMP (05-11-2018) |
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#18 |
Active Member
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Really appreciate all of the advice. Going to start at best buy magnolia room and get the full feel. Since alot of people have said a darker room is better, I'm stick with a TV for living room, and build my dream theatre in the dark basement one day. Then I'm going to take a look at LG's Dolby Vision compatible 75" and 86" models, as that might make more since for my green walled living room. Wives don't like black walls, I don't know why!?
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#19 |
Blu-ray Guru
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4k UHD looks better on my 1080p projector than it does on my 50" 4k TV. I'm guessing size is a factor there but the TVs not for movies so it doesn't bother me.
I don't think you have to paint the walls black or have massive space for a projector, I've neither of those things and manage fine. I do have a black-out blind tho! |
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#20 |
Blu-ray Baron
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LJ,
I've been into home theater starting with DVD back in 1999 and I went front projection four years ago. It's an absolutely amazing experience and took my HT enjoyment to an entirely new level. I really cannot imagine being without it at this point. It really is like having my own movie theater at home and it's like getting away while watching a movie. When the lights are off, I pretty much only see the image. It's incredibly immersive. However, I only recommend people going FP if they have a dedicated room so it can be a black pit because that makes all of the difference with brightness and contrast. With light colored walls, light carpet, let alone windows, don't waste your time if you care about picture quality. A dedicated room can also help A LOT for the audio side of things too. I'm using a well calibrated JVC RS440 which does quite well with UHD BD and is an amazing bang for the buck. HDR can be tricky with FPs because they don't have anywhere near the nits of a flat panel and FP was never a consideration for UHD BD, but properly done Arve curves do a nice job tone mapping but can take time to dial in. So if you want optimum HDR, obviously, you will need a (good) flat panel. I'm using HDR right from the player to the curve. I'm using two different curves depending on the disc/brightness and very recently just made another tweak which helped things further especially with specular highlights. This is the happiest I've been with HDR yet on it and I enjoy the image I am getting quite a bit. From a brightness perspective, I'm in the 30-ftl range with HDR. With SDR, I only like 16 ftL as anything brighter than that on a large screen is too much for me especially since my room is so dark. If I went with a higher gain screen, I could increase brightness dramatically HDR but I hate screen texture and the Stewart ST100 unity gain material I have is as smooth as it gets and not a sparklie to be seen. However, projectors are on the verge of very large lumens increases especially with laser (and hopefully consumer RGB laser is not too far off as that will blow the lid off brightness) so HDR will improve over time and so should tone mapping options. I'm using a 9 foot wide scope screen sitting back around 9.5 feet back which is like watching 2:4 movies at 124" from a 16:9/flat panel perspective. 1:85 movies are around 95". I didn't go with a 16x9 screen for a few reasons: for one, a 1:85 movie at 124" from 9.5 feet back is WAY too big for my liking and is like sitting in the front row of a theater and too much of an IMAX effect. However, scope movies are just excellent and that is because height is a more limiting factor on the eyes than width for obvious reasons. Watching in scope also gives you a real perspective on aspect ratios and composition while viewing movies at the same height as has generally been recommended when possible for films. When you start watching on a CIH set-up, you really start to just feel and see how it makes a lot of sense. Finally, I also like my eyes at the same level of height for each movie from a comfort level with a big screen. Also, I don't do gaming, TV show watching (aside from classic 4:3 stuff occasionally) so it made even more sense for me. So, if you can do it right with a good projector and good room, go for it all the way. If not and you want something large, well, maybe consider one of the better 75-85" flat panels in the meantime. One of these days I'll have to replace my living room plasma, but will likely stay more modestly in size (~55") in that case. screen2.jpg Last edited by HeavyHitter; 05-11-2018 at 11:54 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (05-13-2018), LettuceJUMP (05-12-2018) |
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