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#13022 |
Senior Member
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Brighter doesn't always mean better.
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Thanks given by: | thebarnman (10-21-2023) |
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#13023 |
Member
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#13025 | |
Special Member
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Thanks given by: | Ruined (10-20-2023) |
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#13026 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Considering many transfers have HDR grades with 4000+ peak nits in portions of highlights, OLEDs today are often displaying a downconversion of the HDR grade. This doesnt apply to all films - like Roman Holiday there won't be a difference with a 5000nit set. But a lot of the more recently made blockbusters are up there in brightness, and neither today's OLEDs nor MINI LEDs can display the full range of brightness intended by the filmmaker.
I think a lot of people misunderstand this concept and think "my OLED is bright enough," but we are not talking about a 5000nit full screen brightness. We are talking about highlights of highlights, which current TVs basically have to clip off or aggressively tonemap because they can't reproduce them. This is also why dynamic tonemapping helps so much on today's TVs, because for many films they can't come anywhere near the intended brightness of the HDR grade. But, these 2024 MINI LEDs can display that full range in HDR. No more HDR downconversion needed. It still won't be as good as MicroLED, which will have all that brightness plus per-pixel dimming, but its a big step ahead of what we have today. Quote:
MicroLED is the eventual destination, is it can do the intended HDR grade brightness and lack of burn-in of MINI LED, while also doing per pixel dimming. But that will be very expensive for a long time, so these 2024+ MINI LEDs are the next best option for the true HDR experience w/o downconversion for the many films whose HDR grades are >1000nits peak. Last edited by Ruined; 10-20-2023 at 05:02 PM. |
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#13027 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Feb 2021
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So there is definitely such a thing as too many nits, and if the content becomes painful to watch, you know there's a problem. Earlier HDR compatible OLED's were too dark, despite the perfect blacks, the lack of punchy highlights prevented them from being able to produce optimal HDR, and again this is subjective as many feel the blacks still provide a more realistic and more immersive experience, but I think many high nit seekers would agree. However with modern OLED's capable of getting close to or above 900 nits, that's very near the golden target of 1000 for highlights, and I think that's just about the sweet spot of what is tolerable for viewers in a pitch black room in my humble opinion. I used to be pretty negative on OLED. All the downsides just didn't make sense. However the last few years the strides that the technology has made have really turned me around into a believer. Now a days I believe there's really no better all round viewing experience for films in a pitch dark room at the consumer level (with one caveat, this is assuming one is not among those with ultra high sensitivity to the instantaneous response times, fortunately no one in my home is, and this appears to be pretty rare). Last edited by NeilZ; 10-21-2023 at 04:00 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (10-21-2023), gigan72 (10-23-2023), grodd (10-21-2023), mantle52ball (10-21-2023), Pagey123 (10-21-2023), Staying Salty (10-22-2023), thebarnman (10-21-2023) |
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#13028 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Yeah. If you can reproduce up to 1000 nits in 1:1 fashion (which is fully 75% of the PQ HDR signal) then that'll take care of the vast majority of HDR content today. As long as the TV can effectively tone map the rest, either via its own processing or third party dynamic metadata systems, then you're good. Leave the Light Cannonry™️ to the nits nuts, and I say that as an owner of a TV that kicks out ~1800 nits peak.
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Thanks given by: | deatheats (10-22-2023), grodd (10-21-2023), Morfevzi (10-22-2023), Pagey123 (10-21-2023), thebarnman (10-22-2023) |
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#13029 | |
Junior Member
Mar 2022
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#13030 |
Blu-ray Baron
May 2021
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5000 nits would blind me, this reminds me of the old school CPU speed debates, which no one does anymore after multicore. My LG only does 800 something nits, and if I watch an extremely bright HDR disc I still have to adjust my seating because it's too bright (I'm in a blacked out movie room). I also watch a lot of SDR stuff calibrated to about 120ish nits, gaming is maybe 150nits unles I'm in HDR, I don't see how things can get better than I have it now. I never owned a plasma and enjoyed my films all the same, I think waiting for new tech is always chasing a carrot, and most people don't even need it to have a satisfying experience.
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#13031 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...1#post21563081 when you got something with nearly 3700nit highlights as in the above poster's case and have to smash it down to 1000nits, its not going to look that great in most cases, and could end up looking blown out as this user experienced. These new 5000nit TVs won't have to do this anymore, so in addition to getting punchier highlights of highlights, you lose the tonemapping artifacts. For some movies, the jump from 1000nit-tonemapped HDR to the full brightness grade may be as large as the jump from SDR to HDR in scenes that go into the >1000 nit range. It's a very real difference, and once people see it in action it will be tough to go back to the pre-2024 sets that weren't capable of full HDR; to draw an analogy to the times of HD, today's TVs are like "720p", while these 5000nits TVs will be "1080p/FullHD" in the HDR world. Hey 5000nit TV manufs, there is your marketing slogan, "FullHDR" - you're welcome! Last edited by Ruined; 10-22-2023 at 03:19 PM. |
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#13032 |
Blu-ray Baron
May 2021
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Full Eye Death
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#13034 | |
Power Member
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"Full" nits is no guarantee they can come out of black and properly tone map as we've seen with sub 1000 nit content on various current TV's. Not to mention you are talking about a subset within a subset of 1000+ mastered scenes. Even "IF" and thats a big IF they can properly tone map, it is only one of many things that make a great picture. LED's are still far behind in motion, color accuracy, upscaling, picture detail, black level, grayscale uniformity, streaming low bit rate media, off-angle viewing etc etc. I'll be happy to check one out and see, but I wouldn't get my expectations very high. Last edited by grodd; 10-22-2023 at 07:10 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Morfevzi (10-23-2023), thebarnman (10-23-2023) |
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#13035 | ||
Blu-ray Baron
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#13037 | |
Special Member
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Thanks given by: | NeilZ (10-24-2023) |
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#13038 |
Special Member
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Thanks given by: | bhampton (10-23-2023), Misioon_Odisea (10-23-2023), NeilZ (10-24-2023), Telemachus (10-23-2023), thebarnman (10-23-2023) |
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#13039 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Waiting for Vincent to review the new Magnetar UHD Blu-ray player and compare it to the Panasonic 820.
Build quality is one thing but I'm really wondering about the differences between the two when it comes to video reproduction. So far I've read the Magnetar might be a tiny bit better, but that was from simple YouTube reviews...nothing really thorough though. I can't really put too much weight into that though till Vincent does his review I hope sooner rather than later! |
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#13040 |
Power Member
Apr 2023
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Has anyone else here got a hardware modded 820? If so, how in the name of God do you get external subtitles to work via the custom firmware?
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Tags |
panasonic, ub820, ub9000, value electronics |
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