- Aug 10, 2019
- 2,556
- 5
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I have a problem with the way TVs are reviewed in What HiFi (and elsewhere). It seems like there is a prescribed list of features to oo and ah over in any review, ie:
But, one thing I noticed on a very expensive B&O plasma that I saw was just how 3D the picture looked and how there was absolutely no judder as the picture pans horizontally, I was speechless. This TV is older than my Sony 40W2000 but this exhibits noticeable judder.
I was in Richer Sounds, buying a Pioneer BDP-LX71 blu-ray player and I happened to notice 3 TVs on the wall - nothing special - 2 LGs and a Samsung. They were all playing the same image and yet the middle one (I think it was the Samsung) displayed the 3D, no-judder I am talking about. The assistant told me that this is due to a more powerful processing engine in the TV.
Now, if this is true, WHY does no-one mention these things in reviews? Perhaps the 40X2000 would have provided what I am looking for, but I had assumed it was just the way LCD TVs were. Perhaps plasmas were better. Perhaps it was all down to this 24fps lark (again - what does that give empirically - I can't actually find a comprehensive answer when all the ooing and ahing is over). Perhaps it is down to a better source. I didn't know since no-one bothers to mention it in reviews.
Since this is such a MASSIVE difference to me in image quality, I cannot believe that WhatHiFi reviewers have not noticed it with all of the TVs they have seen. Why would someone not mention this - better not, stop rabbitting on about motion blur from 8ms when these days it makes no difference, but look at what actually does make a difference. How about "This TV provides noticeably little judder due to its high-end processor. As a result, you get a much more realistic and 3D-looking image which is highly fluid. It's like peering through a window rather than watching a TV". It's like the elephant in the room at the moment.
Distinctly dissatisfied.
Black levels
Motion blur from screen refresh rate
Colour rendition
Resolution
But, one thing I noticed on a very expensive B&O plasma that I saw was just how 3D the picture looked and how there was absolutely no judder as the picture pans horizontally, I was speechless. This TV is older than my Sony 40W2000 but this exhibits noticeable judder.
I was in Richer Sounds, buying a Pioneer BDP-LX71 blu-ray player and I happened to notice 3 TVs on the wall - nothing special - 2 LGs and a Samsung. They were all playing the same image and yet the middle one (I think it was the Samsung) displayed the 3D, no-judder I am talking about. The assistant told me that this is due to a more powerful processing engine in the TV.
Now, if this is true, WHY does no-one mention these things in reviews? Perhaps the 40X2000 would have provided what I am looking for, but I had assumed it was just the way LCD TVs were. Perhaps plasmas were better. Perhaps it was all down to this 24fps lark (again - what does that give empirically - I can't actually find a comprehensive answer when all the ooing and ahing is over). Perhaps it is down to a better source. I didn't know since no-one bothers to mention it in reviews.
Since this is such a MASSIVE difference to me in image quality, I cannot believe that WhatHiFi reviewers have not noticed it with all of the TVs they have seen. Why would someone not mention this - better not, stop rabbitting on about motion blur from 8ms when these days it makes no difference, but look at what actually does make a difference. How about "This TV provides noticeably little judder due to its high-end processor. As a result, you get a much more realistic and 3D-looking image which is highly fluid. It's like peering through a window rather than watching a TV". It's like the elephant in the room at the moment.
Distinctly dissatisfied.