The motion is great. No motion judder. Exactly the same as my previous UHD set and before then 1080p set. I am just using factory settings too.Andrewjvt said:All you with uhd tvs
How is the motion on fast scenes? Sports?
Is there any motion judder?
How does the motion compare to your older 1080p set.
These are all OLED TVs though.gel said:The motion is great. No motion judder. Exactly the same as my previous UHD set and before then 1080p set. I am just using factory settings too.Andrewjvt said:All you with uhd tvs
How is the motion on fast scenes? Sports?
Is there any motion judder?
How does the motion compare to your older 1080p set.
No. OLED is as good as plasma.Andrewjvt said:Led has better motion than oled?
gel said:No. OLED is as good as plasma.Andrewjvt said:Led has better motion than oled?
Andrewjvt said:Led has better motion than oled?
My Samsung 65KU6400 is arriving on the 15th, and being installed on the 20th. Will report soon. 🙂Paul. said:John Lewis take away by dead plasma tomorrow and drop off a mid range uhd tv, should have an opinion soon 🙂
It was a simple case of cable failure, which can happen with all brands. A simple swap with another cable of the same manufacturer would've cured it as well. 🙂Benedict_Arnold said:Our oldest (of three) 4k TV is a Samsung 6-series from 2013 or 14.
The motion was a bit juddery when I first got it, but switching to an expensive HDMI cable, an Audio quest Chocolate in my case, cured that.. So ya boo to all the naysayers about the merits of decent cables.
Good question, perhaps they are gamers like you and have a problem with that. Nothing to do with sports or movies tho.nugget2014 said:gel said:No. OLED is as good as plasma.Andrewjvt said:Led has better motion than oled?
So why are loads of people moaning about motion on OLED?
bigboss said:It was a simple case of cable failure, which can happen with all brands. A simple swap with another cable of the same manufacturer would've cured it as well. 🙂Benedict_Arnold said:Our oldest (of three) 4k TV is a Samsung 6-series from 2013 or 14. The motion was a bit juddery when I first got it, but switching to an expensive HDMI cable, an Audio quest Chocolate in my case, cured that.. So ya boo to all the naysayers about the merits of decent cables.
Paul. said:So pleasantly surprised by the Panasonic 58DX700! The AV forums review was pretty up and down but the main cause of the low mark (50hz problems) has been fixed and is irrelevant for me. 58" from two meters is massive!
I paid £840 for a 58” UHD tv, that seems very cheap to me. As a result, I half expected it to be a bit mediocre. I was OK with that; this was meant as a stop gap for a while until I could afford something awesome. I’m pretty chuffed to be honest, it doesn’t have the LCD look that I was worried about. A TV in this price point having local dimming (albeit a basic implementation) is one of the things that swayed me over the Samsung 55KU6400, and the contrast was pretty good. I’m not that fussed over deep blacks as I don’t like watching TV in a pitch black room anyway, but it does seem to beat my old Samsung 51E6500 for contrast performance. The panel seems closer to one of Samsung’s 7 series panels than to a 6 series, it’s got a good quality filter and doesn’t appear as frosty.
Motion performance was a pleasant surprise too. As per AV forums recommendations I set the motion processing to low. This doesn’t introduce any nasty artefacts but just seems to take the edge off the 24p judder on pans. At this price point it’s not going to be up there with the best but it seems very good value.
So far I have watched Deadpool and Civil War on Bluray (not getting in to UHD until more films are available). Upscaling seems good, plenty of detail from a 1080p source.
I haven’t tried any HDR content yet and am not expecting wonders as this TV only puts out 350 nits, but daytime viewing is a marked improvement as expected over my old Plasma, I don’t need to pull the curtains when the sun is low now.
The Firefox interface is wonderful I have to admit. It’s definitely better than Tizen but not too familiar with LG so couldn’t comment. Its attractive to look at, simple and not overly cluttered. Freeview play looks good but don’t think I will use the terrestrial feed. I can see less app savvy people loving Freeview play. Bit disapointed there is no Plex but I can use the Chromecast instead.
Overall I’m pleasantly surprised! When my Plasma died I wasn’t sure I would be able to find something to beat it for sensible money but I was wrong. Unless you have a very high end Plasma like a KPR-500a I’m confident this chap would have the drop on it. For the buttons I paid for it that’s impressive.
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*Before anyone tries to judge the picture quality based off of the photo I have attached, its broad daylight and I set the backlight to maximum to compensate. You can’t judge picture quality on your phone screen anyway so stop being ridiculous 😉
Looks good.Paul. said:Ive cross posted this from my system thread, hope its usefull.
Paul. said:So pleasantly surprised by the Panasonic 58DX700! The AV forums review was pretty up and down but the main cause of the low mark (50hz problems) has been fixed and is irrelevant for me. 58" from two meters is massive!
I paid £840 for a 58” UHD tv, that seems very cheap to me. As a result, I half expected it to be a bit mediocre. I was OK with that; this was meant as a stop gap for a while until I could afford something awesome. I’m pretty chuffed to be honest, it doesn’t have the LCD look that I was worried about. A TV in this price point having local dimming (albeit a basic implementation) is one of the things that swayed me over the Samsung 55KU6400, and the contrast was pretty good. I’m not that fussed over deep blacks as I don’t like watching TV in a pitch black room anyway, but it does seem to beat my old Samsung 51E6500 for contrast performance. The panel seems closer to one of Samsung’s 7 series panels than to a 6 series, it’s got a good quality filter and doesn’t appear as frosty.
Motion performance was a pleasant surprise too. As per AV forums recommendations I set the motion processing to low. This doesn’t introduce any nasty artefacts but just seems to take the edge off the 24p judder on pans. At this price point it’s not going to be up there with the best but it seems very good value.
So far I have watched Deadpool and Civil War on Bluray (not getting in to UHD until more films are available). Upscaling seems good, plenty of detail from a 1080p source.
I haven’t tried any HDR content yet and am not expecting wonders as this TV only puts out 350 nits, but daytime viewing is a marked improvement as expected over my old Plasma, I don’t need to pull the curtains when the sun is low now.
The Firefox interface is wonderful I have to admit. It’s definitely better than Tizen but not too familiar with LG so couldn’t comment. Its attractive to look at, simple and not overly cluttered. Freeview play looks good but don’t think I will use the terrestrial feed. I can see less app savvy people loving Freeview play. Bit disapointed there is no Plex but I can use the Chromecast instead.
Overall I’m pleasantly surprised! When my Plasma died I wasn’t sure I would be able to find something to beat it for sensible money but I was wrong. Unless you have a very high end Plasma like a KPR-500a I’m confident this chap would have the drop on it. For the buttons I paid for it that’s impressive.
*Before anyone tries to judge the picture quality based off of the photo I have attached, its broad daylight and I set the backlight to maximum to compensate. You can’t judge picture quality on your phone screen anyway so stop being ridiculous 😉
What about this deal?Paul. said:Oh there is plenty of HDR calibration options, I'll worry about that when I get a disk player.
Paul. said:I'm gonna wait until Christmas I think.