I got the oled55b7 last week from richer sounds.
Problem is our family are still debating the best picture settings
One day we are happy then we spend a hour messing about with settings
Any advice or opinion welcome please
Andy
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I got the oled55b7 last week from richer sounds.
Problem is our family are still debating the best picture settings
One day we are happy then we spend a hour messing about with settings
Any advice or opinion welcome please
Andy
Turn off all the picture enhancement settings, back off sharpness to it's lowest, set picture to 'natural' not 'vivid', set the brightness and contrast so you can see detail in a black jacket e.g.creases in the sleeve. Don't whack the contrast too high and look for natural colours in flesh tones, grass etc.
I believe THX certified blurays have a screen that aids picture set-up if you have any
There’s advice on colour setings from very clued up av people online i think. I struggled with getting the colours etc right on my LG tv a few years ago and it’s been set since. I’ll have a look to see if i’ve got the site saved anywhere.
http://www.avsforum.com/ But they can only take you so far without calibration equipment. Every TV is a little bit different, which is why the adjustments are there in the first place.
With a TV of that quality it's worth spending another £250 to get it professionally ISF calibrated. Makes a significant difference and you won't have to play around with any settings ever again. :)
A good calibrator will calibrate for all your usual sources (e.g. Sky HD, Blu-ray, Netflix, 4K, etc.). I had my 55E6 done a few months back and am very impressed.
Thanks guys the advice. Ironic thing is the oled b7v was £1700
And I also got 2 other TVs for the kitchen and bedroom and they were £600. But they seem spot on
After hyping up the oled to my Mrs I feel a bit deflated to be honest after seeing it in the richer sounds showroom where it looked amazing
Try these:
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/lg/...-oled/settings
I used this site last year when setting up my B6 and have been happy with them.
If I'd spent £1700 on a TV I wouldn't want to spend £250 (15% of it's cost) on getting it calibrated.
Why do they need calibration - even if every TV is (and I imagine only marginally) different it could be done during testing at the factory and those sources are hardly unique?
I don’t want want to spend £200plus to make my Tele work how I saw it in the showroom when the salesman sold it to me after forking out £1700
Also I’ve noticed the lip sync is out a lot of the time. The sound comes out before the lips move
Turn off the Dolby Atmos settings, unless of course you have an Atmos theater that you're using the TV in. That shpuld take care of the sync trouble.
It’s quite difficult to get OLED TVs set up correctly - I have the B6, and it took me quite a bit to get it how I like it. (Normally I can do it pretty quickly).
I find that if you follow the AVphile’s advice, you end up with an image that is technically correct, but lacking a bit in impact - especially if you’re in anything other than a pitch-black room. I prefer a bit of oomph, without overdoing it and creating something too artificial.
I tend to go for “standard” mode. Turn OLED light down a bit (but still about 80), contrast about 80, brightness 51 or 52, colour 45. That’s a good starting point for SDR. HDR/DolbyVision seems to very dependant on what look they are going for, but again, lowering the colour and raising the brightness slightly seem to give a natural but impactful image.
Much as id like to turn off all the motion processing (which I do when I can - in a dark room you’re less sensitive to flicker), there’s often too much judder for me without it. If you put it on user with the top slider between 0 and 2, it doesn’t introduce too many artifacts.
In HDR you can actually put the dynamic contrast on low, and it avoids a bit of black crush without much impact on the rest of the picture.
The lip sync is a fault of all big TVs in my experience, but I think I’m quite sensitive to it - at least the LG let’s you adjust it for each input, so it just involves messing around with it.
But it's SO worth it, especially for a TV that you may keep for a few years. ISF calibration needs to be done with the TV in its natural viewing environment - not at the factory. It theoretically produces the best picture quality that your panel is capable of producing (great 'depth', fantastic colour, 'pop' and shadow detail, etc.). Look at it like a pre-service of a TV which will then never need to be serviced again. :)
I'm not an ISF calibrator, by the way... ;)
You can buy a set up Blu-ray called Disney WOW. It takes a couple of hours but it's well worth it.
I had an e mail off Richer sounds this morning
Pretty naff response really. The Manager said “well it is the bottom of the OLED range “
Settings are very subjective so just set it up how you like it. In my experience you'll get used to it and will seem fine after a while.
What do you expect the dealer to do - the TV is working - if you can't decide which settings you/family like that's down to you.
The LG OLED range all use the same panels - the only difference up the range is better audio. So your "bottom of the range" (£1700!!!) TV should be capable of the same picture quality as the "top of the range", just with crappier sound :devilish:
From AVForums (https://www.avforums.com/article/bes...arison.13802): "Although technically the entry level model in LG’s 2017 OLED range, the B7 has exactly the same panel and picture performance as every other LG model this year. So you get support for wide colour gamuts and high dynamic range – specifically HDR10, Dolby Vision and HLG."
You’re within your rights to send it back if you’re not happy with it but don’t hang around. You might fare better with a brighter good quality LED set such as the Sony xe900. Bit cheaper too. The manager at Richer Sounds sounds like a moron. I’d expect better from them tbh.
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Are you noticing lip sync issues on a particular source? My Sky Q box has a setting to add a delay to audio. I use it. I also use the delay on my amp.
I was under this impression as well - the press certainly seem to say the the panel and processing circuitry are exactly the same in 2017 models. (I think there are minor differences in the 2016 ones). The mains differences are casing and sound systems.
Sounds like he’s taking out of his subwoofer.
Professional calibration is well worth the money on a new OLED
Me too! I found this:
https://www.cnet.com/uk/how-to/what-...v-calibration/
Friend who is into these things trawls TV forums to see what settings other people recommend and he seems happy enough to optimise his viewing experience that way (rather than chuck a further £200+ at it).
AFAIK the LG OLEDs use the same panels across the range. The main difference is the sound omitted.
The reason TVs are not calibrated at a factory is that every room they go into is different. Different window positions, different lighting, viewing distance etc... I’ve recently moved house and my old picture settings need some tuning as my new lounge is much darker with less ambient light.
“Movie” mode and typically the best on TVs. Make sure all the colour enhancements and ambient settings are set to OFF.
Just bought the 55B7V from Curry’s. £1490 with discounts. Still more than I’d like but hoping the Oled is worth it!
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I dont think that price includes the £250 set up fee :D
Did you manage to get your settings more to your liking len?
£1499 at richer sounds with 6 yr guarantee
Those are some great prices for the B7. The B6 was more like £1800 or so this time last year. They’re obviously getting production costs down (especially given the weaker £).
I’d like to see smaller size OLEDs (for a “bedroom size” tv), but I’m not sure that’s going to happen anytime soon.
I've been very happy with my B6, which I got for £1599 a year ago. The prices now for the B7 and E7 are excellent.