Typo corrected, thanksLess than 20 metres? Wow!
I'm not quite sure what you mean, but from the review Mr Withers says; "The stand is also optional (£99.99), but thankfully LG sent one with the review sample – which is just as well because I wasn’t going to wall mount. ".Brilliant, thanks, Steve - any chance you or the team have some 'real-life' picture of how it looks in a normal environment and 'normal' living room or did you have used the stand rather the recessed wallmount?
Thanks!
So, that will be all LG and Sony televisions then, at any price point. As is the converse with all Samsung televisions not doing Dolby Vision.And the lack of HDR10+ is unforgivable at that price point.
Certainly looking like more content providers and studios moving to towards DV anyway. HDR10+ support is a moot point now.So, that will be all LG and Sony televisions then, at any price point. As is the converse with all Samsung televisions not doing Dolby Vision.
660 nits really isn't very bright. And the lack of HDR10+ is unforgivable at that price point.
Do you reviewers have any way of putting a number on the impact of less-than-optimal colour volume?
Agree, I just got a 65inch B9 this week and watched Atomic Blonde on 4k disc. The highlights on screen were more than bright enough, I was really impressed.'Only' 660 nits...
Some people really need to stop getting hung up on numbers & just use their eyes.
The implication that this TV isn't bright enough is utterly ridiculous..
I used the stand LG sent me and had to place the 65GX in front of a 77C9, which didn't make for a very representative picture.Brilliant, thanks, Steve - any chance you or the team have some 'real-life' picture of how it looks in a normal environment and 'normal' living room or did you have used the stand rather the recessed wallmount?
Thanks!
The GX fits flush against the wall, but it looks like it hooks on to the bracket. So to access the HDMI inputs you would simply need to unhook the TV. For the 65- and 77-inch models that's a two-person job though, because they're obviously large and very heavy.is it easy to access the hdmi ports et al with this stand?
The average peak brightness of LG's 2019 OLED TVs was around 700nits based on the various models I've reviewed and calibrated. Since there is significant variation from panel to panel and this is the first 2020 LG OLED I've measured, it's too early to draw any conclusions.Maybe LG is going down with brightness because of burn in,if higher hdr brightness affect the rate of ageing of pixels it could be possible.
Steve what is your opinion....why new oled series is not aproaching 1000nits teritory but instead going backward?The GX fits flush against the wall, but it looks like it hooks on to the bracket. So to access the HDMI inputs you would simply need to unhook the TV. For the 65- and 77-inch models that's a two-person job though, because they're obviously large and very heavy.
One additional thing for gamers wanting to save a few ££, LG added HGiG setting under the Dynamic Tone Mapping sub-menu in the Game mode to the 2019 models via a firmware update last year, you should see it on your C9. I believe it hard clips HDR, so when you use the PS4’s HDR slider, the LG doesn’t tone map as well (on top of the PS4).
Thanks guys. I did check the Dynamic Tone Mapping menu on my C9 but couldn't see it. Perhaps I need to update the firmware?But Hgig Tone mapping is not a cx exclusive, the c9 also supports it, it was added after a firmware update.