Wait until Jan 5-8th when all the major manufacturers announce their new sets.
johnthehitman
31 Oct 16#11
Thank you, just shows you can't trust the manufactures.
powerbrick
31 Oct 161#12
but according the the LG website HDRPro is HDR10, its all way too confusing at the moment, HD ready all over again :disappointed: 8bit, 8+2bit, 8bit+FRC WTF ???
johnthehitman
31 Oct 161#13
lmao, it really is a mine field. All manufacturers, should be made to use the same terminology. HDR10 is HDR10 anything else is not full / the full HDR standard.
brookheather
31 Oct 16#14
Where does it state that?
peympeym
31 Oct 161#15
Looks like Jungle residents at Calais
eslick
31 Oct 161#16
Usual comments about 10bit panel anyone paying this amount of money isn't going to pay £500 to even the same price again for full fat HDR.
Select LG 2016 4K televisions support HDR10, which we call HDR Pro, because they provide full compatibility with this new standard while also delivering outstanding LG picture quality.
Yes the TV "supports" HDR10 in that it will accept and process the 10-bit signal but the display itself is NOT 10-bit so it will use dithering or some other approximation to display the fine colour gradients and also as it doesn't have the 1000nit brightness it won't really look any different.
josephallen
31 Oct 16#19
That's the point of the UHD Premium certification isn't it? That guarantees that all aspects of HDR specs are met.
gazman090970
31 Oct 161#20
Not really it guarantees the TV can accept the signal thats about it.
gungading
31 Oct 161#21
I love HDR it reminds me of a hot sunny day with sun glasses on feeling the breeze, way to cool.
Cameron92
31 Oct 16#22
Think I'll get one of these for the guest room in case anyone staying wants to watch morning news.
By quite simply seeing the large volume of TV's at this moment claiming to be S-UHD like the one on this post but in reality they can never be as they are 8 bit screens,also these regulations are arbitrary not mandatory which lets the manufacturers get away with what is tantamount to false advertising.The reality is if you want a set that is actually S-UHD and of the same size as the LG here be prepared to spend at least double the £800 it costs.
CaptainVark0
31 Oct 16#26
Can't see if it's 3d!
malachi
31 Oct 161#27
I will be queuing outside Asda, ready and waiting :smile:
johnthehitman
1 Nov 16#28
I had an email response from LG as I thought I'd see what they would come back with (see if I could catch them out). Again they have come back confirming it's HDR10. I've now gone back asking how this can be from an 8-bit processor.
I'll let you know what they come back with.
mcormack
1 Nov 16#29
Pray tell, what does the "S" stand for?
gazman090970
1 Nov 16#30
Too many abbreviations for the same thing(10 bit HDR) it's Samsung that use S-UHD it probably stands for super but if you need clarification by all means contact them.
paulwhitehead66
1 Nov 161#31
anyone got this? what's it like for sd playback and watching sport
paulwhitehead66
1 Nov 16#32
anyone got this? what's it like for sd and sport
cuza75
1 Nov 161#33
Nope it means it can receive the signal. UHD premium means it can display it too. That's proper HDR
josephallen
1 Nov 16#34
UHD Premium is not the same as what LG are calling S-UHD
. This TV is not a UHD Premium TV, nor does it pretend to be. All UHD Premium certified sets conform to full range of HDR specs. Go and have a read of what the specs involved in gaining UHD Premium certification are.
josephallen
1 Nov 16#35
LG use "S-UHD" to indicate a TV featuring 4 k resolution and quantum dot technology; that's all.
Opening post
Just got reply from JL that they r happy to price match with this . Happy days ?
Top comments
All comments (36)
What makes you think that it is not. interested as I'm thinking of buy this.
so no deal
http://www.displayspecifications.com/en/model/28c4504
Wait until Jan 5-8th when all the major manufacturers announce their new sets.
The hdr10=hdrpro if so
http://www.lg.com/us/experience-tvs/hdr/4k-hdr
Select LG 2016 4K televisions support HDR10, which we call HDR Pro, because they provide full compatibility with this new standard while also delivering outstanding LG picture quality.
Yes the TV "supports" HDR10 in that it will accept and process the 10-bit signal but the display itself is NOT 10-bit so it will use dithering or some other approximation to display the fine colour gradients and also as it doesn't have the 1000nit brightness it won't really look any different.
Where have you got that info from?
I'll let you know what they come back with.
. This TV is not a UHD Premium TV, nor does it pretend to be. All UHD Premium certified sets conform to full range of HDR specs. Go and have a read of what the specs involved in gaining UHD Premium certification are.
http://supportnumbers.net/