The individual reviews on the site.Is there anywhere where the actual input lag is mentioned?
They keep saying "low", what do they consider low?
I upgraded from a non-HDR 4K set from Sony (X850B). The HDR alone was a big upgrade. I had been playing Horizon in SDR at 4K and let out an audible "wow" when I fired it up on my 900E and saw it in HDR. (I'm still keeping my X850b in another room for its passive 3D)
I'd say it's a worthy upgrade even if you end up not noticing the resolution difference itself.
Is the 850E also a 10-bit panel with wide color gamut and HDR support?
Low in TV land is usually around 18 - 30ms, the good ones usually below 25ms in game mode. I've seen people still complain about that being too high but that's already very good to me. Enough for me to even play music rhythm games without problem for exampleIs there anywhere where the actual input lag is mentioned?
They keep saying "low", what do they consider low?
I don't know about holy grail levels (I have a 65in ks9000). Out of the very limited number of TVs I've used, the Sony Bravia w900a is still what impressed me the most. For 1080p content, it still looks very good and can do some things better than my ks9000.Got a 65" KS8000 for around $1200USD I believe because I heard it was the holy grail (outside of the super expensive LGs). Had no idea there was a shortage. Really happy with it and glad I picked it up.
It's kind of weird. Woke up Friday morning, turned it on there were two little spots like holes or dimples at the top of the screen just beneath the bezel. On a closer look it seemed like something peeled off behind the screen. They cast little shadows over the picture as well.What happened with it?
QLED is a joke. And OLED is becoming more affordable.How did Samsung go from top of the list to off the list?
Really happy with my X800D I bought at the end of last year, paired it with a Denon X2300W for 5.1. In what seems to be typical Sony fashion it's great for upscaling HD and SD content, which the majority of stuff I watch on it is (since most is 720p from satellite). SD looks far better than on my old 1080p Bravia, and although it could be placebo, even HD sport seems to look better on this TV despite it needing to do more upscaling.
4K is very good, HDR is good for the price (although not nearly as good as LG OLED or very high end Sony TVs). Brightness in HDR is its main downfall, but it's good enough for me for now, and the way I see it, by the time HDR becomes the norm, I'll be ready to upgrade to another TV which will hopefully be both cheaper and better than what I could afford at present.
Is HDMI 2.1 worth holding out another year?
Is it actually true the TCL P-Series has a better picture than the Vizio M-Series? I was looking at one of the Vizio's and was really impressed with it's picture for the price. If the TCL is even better that's really impressive
Uh, do people not buy 1080p TVs anymore?
How does 1080p content look on 4K sets?
Is HDMI 2.1 worth holding out another year?
Uh, do people not buy 1080p TVs anymore?
How does 1080p content look on 4K sets?
Depending on how far away you sit from your TV the difference can vary between unnoticable and nice upgrade.
Diminishing returns at play.
4k TVs will have better picture quality though as basically all high end models are 4k nowdays.
Not from what ive seen. You're looking at least ps6 generation before consoles push past 4k/60fps (which is the limit of current hdmi). By that time way better tvs will be availableIs HDMI 2.1 worth holding out another year?
Uh, do people not buy 1080p TVs anymore?
How does 1080p content look on 4K sets?
Samsung really dropped the ball with their TV offerings this year and Sony is coming back hard so the blow is felt even harder. Curious is Sony can unseat LG as they are eating info their market share as well.
I not agree with the X900E because input lag are too high for multiplayer competitive gaming...
20-25 ms max for multiplayer gaming , not 30+ ...
Hmm, so what about a 27 inch 4K gaming monitor? Is that a good purchase?
The Good: The affordable TCL P series has excellent overall image quality, with deep black levels, rich contrast and accurate color. Its Roku Smart TV platform is the best available, with a simple interface and extensive streaming app support. The TV handles both HDR10 and Dolby Vision high dynamic range sources.
The Bad: Only available in a 55-inch size for now.
The Bottom Line: With excellent picture quality and all the latest features for a rock-bottom price, the TCL P series is one of the best TV values of the year.
Uh, do people not buy 1080p TVs anymore?
How does 1080p content look on 4K sets?
Are any of these native 120+hz refresh rate? If I'm gonna spend that much dough on a TV I'd like to be able to also use my pc on it.
Still too damn expensive. A Vizio P series with better brightness at 65" and $800 is probably when I switch. So 2018.
4k120 would require a ridiculous amount of power. Currently on a 1440p monitor but I'm fine with 1080p, that just makes reaching 120fps a bit easier. Thanks for the answer.The C7 can do 1080P 120. 4k max is 60. That's a HDMI 2.0 limitation though. If you want 4k120 then you need to wait for HDMI 2.1.
Well, I own the C6 and I am feeling damn fine about that TV.
HDMI 2.1 specs bumps the cable from 18gbits to 48gbits, with up to 3x compression [144 Gbit/s max theoretical speed] which will enable up to 10K120 in 4:2:0. 10K60 4:4:4 with 24bit color is confirmed though.4k120 would require a ridiculous amount of power. Currently on a 1440p monitor but I'm fine with 1080p, that just makes reaching 120fps a bit easier. Thanks for the answer.
only problem i have with the x900E is the lipsync issue, the speakers on the tv are terrible and sometimes the sound has delays so it causes lipsync problems, i was floored when i found out about this, i never heard about a tv having these type of issues, a quick google search confirmed i wasn't crazy and that in fact this is a problem with this model, so if you're thinking on getting one get a sound bar as well, even a cheap sound bar will be miles better than the tv speakers, the IQ on this tv on the other hand is absolutely phenomenal, specially how the tv handles lower resolution signals and upscale them.
Most of the TVs they list are unavailable at Amazon.ca. It's always like this. Always.