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#6683 | |
Expert Member
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Thanks given by: | thebigcheese3k (12-09-2020), waxHead (12-09-2020) |
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#6684 |
Power Member
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You're welcome! And thank you for confirming I, Monster works with the top menu trick, I had added it to my wants list after Dragonwyck worked.
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Thanks given by: | thebigcheese3k (12-09-2020) |
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#6685 | |
Senior Member
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#6686 |
Blu-ray Champion
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With nothing announced at CES 2020 as far as UHD players go, I decided to purchase a 9000 to go alongside my OPPO 203, just in case. I already have a 820 which I relegated to the TV room, so I should be set for the future in case the market for players dwindles as a whole lol
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (12-09-2020), teddyballgame (12-09-2020) |
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#6687 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#6688 | |
Banned
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#6689 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | gates70 (12-10-2020) |
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#6690 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | teddyballgame (12-09-2020) |
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#6692 | |
Blu-ray Count
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"Filmmaker Mode" on my Samsung TV does not entirely turn off motion smoothing. I went on a deep dive into the image settings tonight and found that it still left "Judder Reduction" at 3, I had to manually turn it down to 0. "Filmmaker Mode" also left a bunch of image settings at truly hideous levels, I went in and adjusted them all. I put Brightness to the max, 50, and it looks normal now, dark areas were pitch black before. I also put Contrast to the max, 50, and again it looked normal, not in any way blown out, but it brought more detail to dark areas. I put sharpness to 0, because it creates hideous digital noise. I left Color and Tint normal. I had to fix White Balance, because it defaulted to Warm 2, which gave everything a sepia glow. I reset it to Normal. I don't have a clue what Gamma BT.1886 is, but I set it to the max, 3, and it looked most normal. I turned Shadow Detail up to the max, 5, and it brought out a lot of detail in the crushed dark areas. That said, I'm still not a fan of how the image looks with 24p set to Auto on the HDMI output on the UHD player, I feel it still looks like motion smoothing. However, turning it to "Off," which induces a bit of extra judder, as a poster above pointed out, produces an image that is less fluid and far more film-like to me. Obviously I'm new to UHD, but I truly don't believe I'm seeing phantom motion smoothing due to having a standard HD system for so long. I'm at least glad to see that my BDs look normal on the system, since my collection is 99% BDs, and since UHD looks like it will have a tragically short life, I don't expect I'll be able to upgrade many of them beyond the biggest blockbusters. |
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#6693 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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lol @ "fixing the white balance", when the content is actually mastered that way. Sorry James but I read that and immediately thought of this:
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#6694 | |
Special Member
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The other settings, I can only assume they were correctly defaulting in their respective SDR and HDR modes (never know if something went fishy though). You are likely used to far inacurate modes then? Is this the new TV you just got? Which model did you upgrade from the older one we were talking about earlier? |
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#6696 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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If that's for SDR in a dark room, then it's way too bright and it's going to severely impact your HDR experience as you're nuking content mastered to 100 nits by maxing out the backlight. HDR will have nowhere to go as it's maxed out anyway and your brain will think it's a dim nightmare!
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#6697 |
Special Member
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Ah OK. Well the reality is that it's limited to what it can do. Looking at rtings, the peak brightness for HDR is about 270 nits, and it's an edge lit TV. There will be heavy compromises with HDR and backlight/contrast on that set...it makes sense that he found it too dim.
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Thanks given by: | James Luckard (12-10-2020) |
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#6698 |
Active Member
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Considering getting this player. So my impression of the optimiser is that it should be used on a case-by-case basis? Or can it be left on and not make much of a difference to discs that don’t ‘need’ it?
Is it effectively a fixed uniform change to the tone mapping or is it more adaptive based on the info shown? Hearing about it is only making me think about the ‘active HDR’ on LG Oleds, turned on by setting Dynamic Contrast to ‘Low’ and allegedly recommended for picture accuracy. It dimmed bright images (pulling down some highlight detail) but brightened dark ones (conversely blowing out any specular highlights). I turned it off because of the ungodly flickering that would be induced when a dark object against a light background would confuse the heck out of it. |
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#6700 | |
Special Member
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I set it on and forget it, but I also have OLED. Sony likes to maintain accuracy at the expense of clipping highlights...which is great and all, but for the movies that are mastered with high nits (up to 4,000 or whatever), it can make a difference in resolving a little more detail. In most movies though, it's no effect and not really a big deal to worry about. But what you describe is a good example of the shortcomings of "dynamic" tonemapping. |
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Tags |
panasonic, ub820, ub9000, value electronics |
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