As an Amazon associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!                               
×

Best 4K Blu-ray Deals


Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals »
Top deals | New deals  
 All countries United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France Spain Italy Australia Netherlands Japan Mexico
Back to the Future 4K (Blu-ray)
$29.96
5 hrs ago
Hard Boiled 4K (Blu-ray)
$49.99
1 day ago
Shin Godzilla 4K (Blu-ray)
$34.96
1 day ago
In the Mouth of Madness 4K (Blu-ray)
$36.69
 
Spawn 4K (Blu-ray)
$31.99
 
Wallace & Gromit: The Complete Cracking Collection 4K (Blu-ray)
$13.99
9 hrs ago
The Sound of Music 4K (Blu-ray)
$37.99
 
The Terminator 4K (Blu-ray)
$14.44
1 day ago
I Know What You Did Last Summer 4K (Blu-ray)
$39.99
 
The Toxic Avenger 4K (Blu-ray)
$29.96
1 day ago
Creepshow 2 4K (Blu-ray)
$32.99
 
A Nightmare on Elm Street Collection 4K (Blu-ray)
$96.99
 
What's your next favorite movie?
Join our movie community to find out


Image from: Life of Pi (2012)

Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > 4K Ultra HD > 4K Ultra HD Players, Hardware and News
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 09-09-2019, 08:05 PM   #4441
DVD Josh DVD Josh is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
DVD Josh's Avatar
 
Jan 2019
222
933
229
16
373
90
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ant1010 View Post
I can see that. But I do disagree with you as well. The C9 is definitely a high end display, I don't know how you can't consider it one. Yeah if Panny's OLEDs were sold in America it would most likely be coming in third behind it and Sony. Also its pretty damn close to being the best after multiple results from shootouts
According to rtings.com:

"The LG C9 is a high end 2019 OLED TV, and directly replaces LG's 2018 C8."

So at least one person agrees with Ant. I've never seen one so I personally have no idea.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:29 PM   #4442
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ant1010 View Post
hence why you shut off DV. If you have DV on yes Optimizer doesn't work. didn't I just write that lol. I'll pm Robert have him chime in here, he knows much more about this then I do.
I would strongly advise NOT to turn DV off. I like the Panasonic hdr optimizer, but don't kid yourself that it's better than DV. It tone maps contents better in most cases. Have you compared them yourself yet?
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:32 PM   #4443
sapiendut sapiendut is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
sapiendut's Avatar
 
Jul 2009
Canada
2
3
Default

The two have completely different functions. If the Display can’t do more than 800 nits, using DV will not “help” as DV is dealing with 1,000 nits and up.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:39 PM   #4444
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

What do you mean by the two has different functions? To sum it up on a simple level, they both are tone mapping. There are displays out there that can't do 800 and DV still benefits that particular display.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:45 PM   #4445
sapiendut sapiendut is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
sapiendut's Avatar
 
Jul 2009
Canada
2
3
Default

HDR Optimizer is Tone REmapping. It remaps HDR to a target nit level. DV is tone mapping, NOT remapping.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:46 PM   #4446
pbz06 pbz06 is offline
Special Member
 
Nov 2009
524
828
9
Default

I use DV with DV content. I used HDR Optimizer for HDR10 content (which only kicks in for >1,000 nits). Simple enough, and gave me best results.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
Geoff D (09-10-2019), panasonicst60 (09-09-2019)
Old 09-09-2019, 08:51 PM   #4447
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

Yes similar but of course not the same. Where did you get this?"If the Display can’t do more than 800 nits, using DV will not “help” as DV is dealing with 1,000 nits and up."
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 08:54 PM   #4448
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pbz06 View Post
I use DV with DV content. I used HDR Optimizer for HDR10 content (which only kicks in for >1,000 nits). Simple enough, and gave me best results.
That's exactly what I do. Agreed!
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 09:03 PM   #4449
pbz06 pbz06 is offline
Special Member
 
Nov 2009
524
828
9
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by panasonicst60 View Post
That's exactly what I do. Agreed!
Aquaman is a good example…one of the early scenes when the dad is waiting on the pier, there’s a bright sun in the background. Turning Off DV and using Optimizer, still clips it a little bit. Keeping DV on will tonemap it better and resolves better details. In this case, and most others I’ve tested, the dynamic metadata works better.

The Optimizer is money when watching high nit HDR10 content on OLED…my A9G blows out a lot of the highlights (by design), but the Optimizer does a good job of maintaining overall picture brightness and resolving only the blown out details.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 09:05 PM   #4450
tama tama is offline
Blu-ray Ninja
 
tama's Avatar
 
Nov 2010
San Jose, CA
691
1235
Default

It always amazes me when people start digging themselves into a hole they don't stop to jump out but continue to dig in.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 09:09 PM   #4451
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pbz06 View Post
Aquaman is a good example…one of the early scenes when the dad is waiting on the pier, there’s a bright sun in the background. Turning Off DV and using Optimizer, still clips it a little bit. Keeping DV on will tonemap it better and resolves better details. In this case, and most others I’ve tested, the dynamic metadata works better.

The Optimizer is money when watching high nit HDR10 content on OLED…my A9G blows out a lot of the highlights (by design), but the Optimizer does a good job of maintaining overall picture brightness and resolving only the blown out details.
I was always skeptical of people saying to turn off DV and let hdr optimizer do the work. I also tested it out myself before coming to a conclusion.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-09-2019, 09:31 PM   #4452
pbz06 pbz06 is offline
Special Member
 
Nov 2009
524
828
9
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by panasonicst60 View Post
I was always skeptical of people saying to turn off DV and let hdr optimizer do the work. I also tested it out myself before coming to a conclusion.
My first few rounds of testing focused on HDR10 movies only, so I was fixated on that. For high nit content, I do prefer using the Optimizer with static data. The benefits were very clear when toggling On vs Off...the overall brightness stayed almost identical while only affecting the highlights/areas where they would clip. Doing that heavy lifting for an OLED and passing it off as static 1,000 nit data to the TV made it more manageable and I didn't notice any negatives. The A9G can easily tonemap the rest.

Geoff noticed some banding that gets introduced, but I have not yet. I do enable Smooth Gradation (Low) so maybe that's why? Either way, I like being able to see more details in areas that would be clipped otherwise.

The dynamic nature of DV + OLED seems to work as intended, and looked better in every scene I tested vs HDR10 + Optimizer. Including the horse scene on the S&M test demo. I didn't put too much weight into that initially because I don't know how test/demo materials worked, and waited to test more real movie scenes. At the end of the day, I settled on keeping DV enabled for DV content, and using the Optimizer only for HDR10 (I wish I can set it to on for > 1,000 and off for less, hehe).
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 01:41 AM   #4453
Geoff D Geoff D is offline
Blu-ray Emperor
 
Geoff D's Avatar
 
Feb 2009
Swanage, Engerland
1348
2525
6
33
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pbz06 View Post
My first few rounds of testing focused on HDR10 movies only, so I was fixated on that. For high nit content, I do prefer using the Optimizer with static data. The benefits were very clear when toggling On vs Off...the overall brightness stayed almost identical while only affecting the highlights/areas where they would clip. Doing that heavy lifting for an OLED and passing it off as static 1,000 nit data to the TV made it more manageable and I didn't notice any negatives. The A9G can easily tonemap the rest.

Geoff noticed some banding that gets introduced, but I have not yet. I do enable Smooth Gradation (Low) so maybe that's why? Either way, I like being able to see more details in areas that would be clipped otherwise.

The dynamic nature of DV + OLED seems to work as intended, and looked better in every scene I tested vs HDR10 + Optimizer. Including the horse scene on the S&M test demo. I didn't put too much weight into that initially because I don't know how test/demo materials worked, and waited to test more real movie scenes. At the end of the day, I settled on keeping DV enabled for DV content, and using the Optimizer only for HDR10 (I wish I can set it to on for > 1,000 and off for less, hehe).
Nice. When I was doing all my testing with the Optimiser then Smooth Gradation on Low is exactly what I found helped to level the banding back out again, e.g. https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...n#post16240338. It takes a little bit more of the signal with it than I would like but otherwise works very well to counteract the banding. However I've had very little need to use the Optimiser and by extension Smooth Gradation (I keep it off if I can help it) because so many titles that I'm buying either have DV (which I'd still rather use than not, even in the gimped Sony implementation) or have a 1000-nit HDR10 mastering (which the ZD9 can display "1:1") so I'm good either way.

For the handful of titles that have 4000 or higher mastering and no DV, usually Sony movies, then I've been using my reduced contrast setting on the TV which lowers luminance but allows 4000-nit highlights to be resolved, and as Sony often blast the shit out of the HDR brightness anyway then it delivers a more pleasantly filmlike image to my eyes with the luminance rolled off a bit.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 02:00 AM   #4454
LettuceJUMP LettuceJUMP is offline
Active Member
 
Jan 2010
2
Default

Been following this thread for ages...hoping you educated folks can help.
Little story first. I previously owned a 75” sharp 4k (non hdr). Then I heard I needed hdr.
Went out and bought a b6 65” lg oled and an oppo 203. But I sit very far away, and the b6 did not thrill me. The newer lg 77” oleds were very expensive so I settled on a 75” x900 sony. It’s still probably mid-tier quality, and I switched to the new x800m2 figuring sony to sony should work well.
Here I am today, not 100% blown away by either. Am I better off taking a stab at a ub820 for superior hdr optimization or upgrading to a higher end sony or lg tv?
Thanks for advice.

Last edited by LettuceJUMP; 09-10-2019 at 02:20 AM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 03:57 AM   #4455
bombdog bombdog is offline
Junior Member
 
Sep 2019
Default

can someone plz help, my daughter give a UB820 for my Birthday to go along with my lg C8 ( pro calibrated ) i don't have a clue how or what settings to change to get a good picture. i tried searching but are getting confuse about using or not using the tv DTM vs the player ans whatever setting to change .can someone help me plz
thanks in advance...
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 04:25 AM   #4456
gkolb gkolb is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
gkolb's Avatar
 
Feb 2012
Bakersfield, CA
980
2943
273
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by bombdog View Post
can someone plz help, my daughter give a UB820 for my Birthday to go along with my lg C8 ( pro calibrated ) i don't have a clue how or what settings to change to get a good picture. i tried searching but are getting confuse about using or not using the tv DTM vs the player ans whatever setting to change .can someone help me plz
thanks in advance...
Please help us understand, are you wanting to play 4K UHD discs on your player, or stream? The 820 is a very good disc player.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 04:39 AM   #4457
bombdog bombdog is offline
Junior Member
 
Sep 2019
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by gkolb View Post
Please help us understand, are you wanting to play 4K UHD discs on your player, or stream? The 820 is a very good disc player.
4k UHD i will be using the c8 for streaming....thanks for replying
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 06:29 AM   #4458
dawizeguy dawizeguy is offline
Member
 
Oct 2018
Copenhagen, Denmark
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by panasonicst60 View Post
I was always skeptical of people saying to turn off DV and let hdr optimizer do the work. I also tested it out myself before coming to a conclusion.
Worth mentioning is the fact that DV not only tonemaps the EOTF curve, i.e. lighting. It also perform dynamic tonemapping of color rendering in order to optimize color output to the capabilities of the target display. The HDR optimizer can't do this.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 06:34 AM   #4459
gkolb gkolb is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
gkolb's Avatar
 
Feb 2012
Bakersfield, CA
980
2943
273
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by bombdog View Post
4k UHD i will be using the c8 for streaming....thanks for replying
Sorry I’m not a streamer, someone else will have to help you out.
  Reply With Quote
Old 09-10-2019, 07:09 AM   #4460
panasonicst60 panasonicst60 is offline
Power Member
 
panasonicst60's Avatar
 
Sep 2016
297
442
17
44
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dawizeguy View Post
Worth mentioning is the fact that DV not only tonemaps the EOTF curve, i.e. lighting. It also perform dynamic tonemapping of color rendering in order to optimize color output to the capabilities of the target display. The HDR optimizer can't do this.
That is correct. I compared fleshtones and DV beats opitmizer no question.
  Reply With Quote
Reply
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > 4K Ultra HD > 4K Ultra HD Players, Hardware and News

Tags
panasonic, ub820, ub9000, value electronics


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 06:28 PM.