ChubbleDucks
Member
Wait, what?
The ks7000 in the UK is the Ks8000 in US
Wait, what?
Wait, what?
The ks7000 in the UK is the Ks8000 in US
KS7090 is the exact model name on Amazon.de, for example. (I assume you're german because of your avatar, sad day yesterday.)
Unfortunately the model has been significantly more expensive here, then in the US.
More affordable models are the KU6300 in the US which is called KU6079 on Amazon.de
And the KU6409 on Amazon.de, I don't know what that model is called in the US, but it has a slightly better image than the Ku6300.
Both aren't as good as the KS7090, though.
Yep. Why on earth Samsung would do that though....
So people don't get mad that the same model is sold for almost half the price in the US...
I've seen the 60 inch KS8000 offered for 1200$ in the US, the cheapest I've seen it in Germany was 1999
So people don't get mad that the same model is sold for almost half the price in the US...
I've seen the 60 inch KS8000 offered for 1200$ in the US, the cheapest I've seen it in Germany was 1999
Bought my 4th KS8000 and 1080p blu rays don't look that great on this TV. I'm comparing this directly to my old 4k Sony 810C (2015 model) that had fantastic upscaling of 1080p blu rays.
Also motion sucks compared to the Sony, it's either soap opera or juddery.
I've only been playing FF 15 on my TV and dynamic contrast blows out whites and blacks. Almost like bringing it back to non hdr mode where you do lose detail. Never had the dark and washed out issue but then again, I've only tried FF 15.Hello, I've had this TV since Thanksgiving and here are my impressions.
These are based off games for the PS4 Pro:
HDR enabled games: Dynamic Picture mode looks the best, with Dynamic Contrast high. There is an increase in lag but largely negligible, best used it for single player games. Use GAME mode for multiplayer with dynamic contrast high to insure the lag is minimal.
Non HDR games: Use Game mode, toggle dynamic contrast according to each title.
I know many people will swear that detail is lost with the Dynamic Contrast set to High, but I really believe it's subjective, without the Dynamic Contrast, many of the games seem to dark and washed out to me.
I can post my settings for NBA 2k17 or Hitman if needed.
I'm really close from pulling the trigger on this (KS7000 in EU).
Price had dropped from 1899 EUR at launch to 1199 EUR currently for the 55' one which starts to be VERY interesting.
It would serve as a replacement for a FULL HD 50incher from Sony (W805 from 2014, to be moved in the bedroom as a result) and to be used with both my PS4 Pro and my PC (hooked up to it, but also to the nearby living room desk sporting a 1440p/Gsync/IPS AOC Agon).
Now my question is : with only a couple of months max before all constructors 2017 offering, is it worth waiting to see what comes next? I just don't want to take the risk to "wait" for something that would end up costing 500-600 EUR more for the same range of performance just because it's new, and loose the opportunity to have this one at a discount when stocks are gone.
I've renounced on OLED, as much as I love it, but even the LG B6 cost twice the price wich I can't justify as a good family man. So I would only be looking into Samsung's upcoming Q series or next offering from Sony. Not willing to go lower than KS7000 level of perf either.
Where did you find it for 1199?
I believe the 49", 55", 60", and 65" should be identical in specifications. Just screen size differs.Gemüsepizza;229751385 said:Are there any major differences between the 49 inch and 55 inch model?
I wanted to buy the 55 inch version at first, but the smaller version might be good enough for me, considering I only sit 1.6m away from the TV. Buying the 49 inch TV also has the advantage that I don't have to buy new furniture and still have a bit money left to buy an UHD Blu-ray player and Horizon Zero Dawn / Mass Effect lol.
Fucking great, ever since upgrading to 1160 I'm getting the intermittent black screen. Forcing HDCP1.4 doesn't solve it either.
I gave myself a stroke trying to determine if my HDR was working correctly.
I think I threw all logic to the wind, set my PS4 to YUV420 at the tentative, conflicting advice of this thread, and face the possibility that I'm lying to myself everyday when I admire how good the Regalia looks driving around the countryside.
HDR is dark no matter what your settings. As you've discovered, the only "fix" is to use Medium or High Dynamic Contrast (personally I think High looks best). It still looks great.
Gemüsepizza;229751385 said:Are there any major differences between the 49 inch and 55 inch model?
I wanted to buy the 55 inch version at first, but the smaller version might be good enough for me, considering I only sit 1.6m away from the TV. Buying the 49 inch TV also has the advantage that I don't have to buy new furniture and still have a bit money left to buy an UHD Blu-ray player and Horizon Zero Dawn / Mass Effect lol.
Have you tried changing your sound settings on the console? I was getting this when set to Dolby, but changed it to DTS and it stopped.
No that didn't do anything to help. It only happens when I'm playing HDR content.
Have you tried a new cable? Do you run it straight to the TV or via a receiver?
While I've had great luck with HDR on my PS4 on this TV, trying to play Forza Horizon 3 with HDR hasn't been great. I've got HDR enabled for the HDMI port, the Xbox One S passes all of the 4K/HDR checks in the video menu, backlight cranked to the max, and the picture still looks duller and dingier than without HDR. Anything I'm doing wrong? Overlooking?
I've tried different cables and ports. No receiver.
I'm reverting back to stable firmware for ps4 to see if that makes a difference. I installed the beta fw the same time the tv went to 1160.
I believe the 49", 55", 60", and 65" should be identical in specifications. Just screen size differs.
I've read that, in general, smaller tv sizes are less prone to panel quality issues.
Were your other 3 fine or are you saying you had to make 3 returns?
Had 2 60s and they both had light bleed on the bottom left of the screen. Switched to the 55" and it had several bleed spots on the bottom of the screen. On my 2nd 55" and finally no light bleed spots but the upscaling on blu rays is terrible.
Anybody find a way to keep the input names from switching to hdmi 1 from game console etc?
Anybody find a way to keep the input names from switching to hdmi 1 from game console etc?
Anybody find a way to keep the input names from switching to hdmi 1 from game console etc?
Not had an issue either. Maybe if you put in a custom name for it then it won't switch.
I cannot tell a difference between hdr on or off for the input the PS4 pro is hooked up to.
It's also crazy that there's so many conflicting opinions even in this thread as to what to set everything to. This is all way too confusing for me, I can't even imagine for a regular user who's not super nerdy and scouring message boards.
No, it does it all the time. Annoying but not really a deal breaker. I'm routing everything through my receiver so I'm only using the one port on the TV but it switches based on what's being fed to it (Xbox, PS4, PC, etc.)
It's not a big deal because it's really irrelevant what it says. The TV treats them all the same EXCEPT PC, which has it's own settings, lag, etc. So as long as it's not switching to PC you really don't have to worry about it.
That doesn't help either, sadly. It will just change the next time you feed it a different device.
For me (not the person you're quoting), I've been playing FFXV for fifty hours and compulsively switching HDR on and off to try and see if my eyes can tell a difference.Which HDR-capable game are you testing this with?
..so then I switched it to automatic.If you've got a 10-bit display the ps4 should automatically set it to YUV422 when on a HDR game. YUV420 and RGB will be just for non-HDR.
...which made me think manually forcing RGB is the way to go.Not sure if this has been mentioned but hopefully this thread will help a few that is having "washed out HDR color" and "flickering" problem with the PRO. I found the solution after speaking with a high level Sony TV tech. First I thought the problem was with my Sony X930D TV, but it turned out that it's a PlayStation 4 PRO problem.
Solution is to switch from Automatic Resolution under the Video Putput Setting of your PRO to RGB. This way the PRO will automatically change to from RGB to YUV422 when you are playing a HDR game.
So pretty much Automatic Resolution doesn't work with all TVs. And I am very surprised that it does not work on my TV because it's one of the newest model by Sony. Sony is acknowledged of this problem but unsure when this will be fixed.
...and suddenly my head hurts.This thread is less about insuring the best image quality as it is about insuring that you will not run into issues suck as banding, etc.
Your safest bet is to force YUV420 limited for all content to have the best chance of no banding. This will be 2160p 10-bit for both SDR and HDR.
Forcing RGB 444 full will result in 8-bit for SDR, not necessarily better, and really it switches to YUV422 or YUV420 limited during HDR anyway so it's not something you can control. It can also result in 12-bit output which some TV will not properly dither.
Besides this, the Samsung have a bug where the default video level is nearly always limited, unless a specific boot order is completed. It is up to you, but easiest thing to do is force YUV420 limited from the Pro.
PS4 Pro "Video Output Settings" set to Automatic everything
Samsung "Color Space" set to Auto
PS4 Pro will boot into RGB (the best setting for SDR content)
PS4 Pro will automatically switch into YUV422 when you start an HDR game (the best setting for HDR content)
PS4 Pro will automatically switch back to RGB when you close an HDR game (the best setting for SDR content)
Just manually set your Backlight to 20 when you start an HDR game.
The end.
Pretty simple, thanks.
Other than the Backlight I also have Contrast 85-90 for SDR and Smart LED to Low. So for HDR I max Contrast and then switch LED to High.
Do you have Contrast to 100 and Smart LED to High all the time?
This answer is simple, confident, and the most recent thing I've read. SOUNDS GREAT, I'll give it a go.PS4 Pro "Video Output Settings" set to Automatic everything
Samsung "Color Space" set to Auto
PS4 Pro will boot into RGB (the best setting for SDR content)
PS4 Pro will automatically switch into YUV422 when you start an HDR game (the best setting for HDR content)
PS4 Pro will automatically switch back to RGB when you close an HDR game (the best setting for SDR content)
Just manually set your Backlight to 20 when you start an HDR game.
The end.
This answer is simple, confident, and the most recent thing I've read. SOUNDS GREAT, I'll give it a go.
Thank you very much for clarifying in your second post, as well.