- Joined
- 6 Sep 2016
- Posts
- 11,433
Id4 movie.
It’s not all about nits, it’s the difference between dark and light, highlights peaking at 700 nits whilst also displaying true black is plenty for HDR.
What are you using for playback?
The OLED TVs don't have that many nits.
you hate HDR because your TV screen is too bright :-/ perhaps set the screen up properly? Sounds like you're using it out the box, I wouldn't dream of having my OLED at 100, for reduction of burn issues if nothing else.
My E6 is apparently only 600 nits but it's plenty bright enough for me. It hurts my eyes sometimes too. The calibrator put the OLED light down to 85
if that hurts your eyes try using the 800+ tv's on the market.
mine is much higher than yours in terms of brightness and it doesn't hurt my eyes at all.
You know for HDR OLED light set at 100 is correct. If you start messing with the HDR settings without a proper calibration tools you will ruin the image.
Changing the OLED light level does not affect the image quality.
For HDR it affects the tone mapping and dynamic range. There is a reason the review sites recommend leaving it at 100 for HDR.
I came from a plasma and watch my OLED in a dark room, my OLED light for HDR is 100, you get use to it, lowering the OLED light for HDR is not something you should be doing.oled light setting should exist, so you a normal light output, for a known ***** screen in non her, then it has HDR oled, so with a white screen in her, it has specific light output.
Oled light effects everything so with contrast, peak brightness, energy saving off, dynamic gone mapping it is very bright. I watch in a unlit room, curtains drawn, the only light is the LEDs behind the TV 4*24 and 2x9" strips
lol. no.You know for HDR OLED light set at 100 is correct. If you start messing with the HDR settings without a proper calibration tools you will ruin the image.