reviewc about LG G6 oled 4K ultra HD HDR


Hello i'm walid (the reviewer) and today i will you talk about :

LG G6 Signature OLED 4K HDR Ultra HD




 

There’s no better way to state it. The LG OLED65G6P (and its 77 inch cousin when it comes out soon) is almost inarguably the best 4K TV of 2016, at least from what has been released so far by any brand –though we doubt this model will be topped at least until the end of 2016 when a number of new TVs possibly emerge.
Not only is this a 4K TV with full HDR certification from both the UHD Alliance and Dolby Labs with their respective Ultra HD Premium and Dolby Vision standards, it’s simply stunning in every way. Picture quality is amazing, the blacks are perfect, colors look intensely realistic and just about everything else you could want in a 4K TV is present, along with LG’s superb WebOS 3.0 smart TV platform, which still remains one of the best if not the best on the market for usability and intuitive design. In simple terms, the word “Outstanding”, perfectly fits the G6 65 inch model that’s now out on sale (with a 77 inch Signature model coming soon, followed by several E and B-Series OLED 4K televisions for a bit further down the road.
The price for the G6 we’re focusing on here is insane considering that this is only a 65 inch 4K HDR TV but if you want the literal best on the market today, this is your television of choice, piggy bank-breaking retail cost and all.

 

 Let’s start with the physical design of the G6, because it’s unlike that of any other 4K TV on sale today or to-date. A single flat and insanely thin nearly bezel-free glass panel with a thickness of just 1/8th of an inch takes up the entire display space. If a company wanted to create a TV display that looked as much as possible like a weightless window into another world, they simply couldn’t have come closer than LG came with the look of the G6’s screen because of this. All other aspects of the TV’s sound, processing and memory storage technology are kept inside a slim rectangular grey base that spans the width of the TV and also includes the built-in sound bar. For those of you who want to mount your own G6 to a wall, that same rectangular base can be retracted behind the glass display panel and thus leaves you with nothing but a massive glass screen on which all content appears

 
The overall effect of the G6 design is in other words, deeply impressive, with nothing that quite matches it for immersive quality among any other 4K TV today.
Next up, there is the OLED technology of the G6. This is the same feature that mainly made LG’s 2015 4K TVs the best models on the market --particularly the EF9500 and EG9600 OLED 4K editions--, and LG’s OLED skill is back but with still further enhancements to deliver a display that offers unparalleled local dimming, lighting precision and contrast levels.
By its very nature, OLED display technology allows each and every single one of the 8.29 million pixels on the G6’s 4K screen to individually light up to full brightness or dim down to perfect darkness. There is no backlighting technology to speak of and the concept of local dimming, which in LCD 4K TVs might consist of several dozen to a couple hundred “local dimming” zones, gets taken to an extreme in which there are 8.29 million local dimming zones on the OLED TV, one for each pixel. As we described before in our LCD vs. OLED comparison post, no LCD/LED 4K TV model comes close to matching this level of precision, and the LG G6 takes the OLED brightness to its highest levels yet.
 
Next up, there is the sheer color quality of the G6, by their nature, OLEDs can be filtered in a way that lets them create a very diverse and smooth color saturation level. In the case of the G6, it is the first OLED TV to have been certified by the UHD Alliance for its HDR standards, which means that it can output 10-bit color and has in fact had its OLED cells reformulated from their 2015 design so that they can achieve both higher luminance and deliver virtually 100% of the DCI-P3 color space. This is an impressive achievement indeed, considering that even Samsung’s stunning KS9000 and other 2016 SUHD 4K TVs with HDR only manage about 93% of DCI-P3 color space coverage.
Furthermore, Since LG has built compliance with UHD Alliance HDR standards into its OLED65G6P, the TV has to manage no more than 0.0005 nits of maximum darkness (or darker) and has to be capable of a minimal peak brightness of 540 nits. These are the HDR standards that the UHD Alliance has set for OLED 4K TVs and the G6 manages to deliver on all of them. This means two different things. First among them, the simple fact that, unlike some of the older OLED 4K TVs from 2014 and Plasma TVs before them, the G6 is truly a bright 4K television by any measure. It’s peak luminance can exceed 540 nits in 10% spot testing and this means a quality of peak brightness that matches the same spec in many high quality (but not HDR) LCD TVs. For OLED technology, this is impressive indeed.
 
Secondly, the black level and peak brightness ranges of the G6 mean that it can offer a native (not dynamic) contrast ratio of 1 million to 1. So-called “dynamic contrast” ratios of 1 million or more to 1 are a common part of 4K TV marketing and for the most part they’re meaningless nonsense. However, with the OLED65G6P, we see an actual, native and testable contrast ratio in these ranges. This is also something we can soon expect from other LG OLED 4K TVs as they emerge, and from other brands’ OLED models.



In essence, the qualities described above confer upon the G6 one truly spectacular quality of display that has to be seen to be believed. A written description in a review and even photos taken of a G6 model at work don’t do justice to how stunningly this TV’s native 4K HDR video sources play out.
Finally, we can’t finish a rundown of the G6’s qualities without also covering just how much we love the WebOS 3.0 smart TV platform. It’s superb, it’s highly intuitive and the LG “Magic” smart remote that accompanies it is also a great little piece of TV control hardware
 

Our only serious complaint about the OLED65G6P is its price tag, end even with this we can’t criticize too much since what you’re getting for those nearly $8,000 spent is a 4K OLED TV that’s better even than the outstanding 2015 EF9500 OLED 4K TV, with a physical design that’s even more impressive to behold in a living room or den.
Aside from pricing, two other minor things are worth mentioning. First of all, despite impressive gains in brightness that put the G6 on par with what a normal high end LCD/LED TV can manage in terms of luminance, the G6 is still well behind the new 2016 HDR LCD TVs in terms of how many nits it outputs. 540+ nits (up to almost 600 or so) is remarkably good brightness for OLED technology, similar to the brightness of many 2014 and 2015 LCD 4K TVs but it’s less than half the luminance that 2016’s HDR LCD models like the Samsung SUHD TVs and Sony’s new Bravia models are capable of. This is compensated for by an extraordinarily deep perfect black capacity but for realism, raw peak brightness is a crucial technology. If OLED can’t go brighter still down the road, it will start to lag behind the eventual arrival of 2,000+ nit LCD TVs as they almost certainly emerge.
 


Finally, sound quality on the G6, while quite robust for the space it occupies in the highly minimalist sound bar/ processing unit along the bottom of the TV, could have been further improved even if it meant a slightly larger speaker system. This is after all a 4K TV that costs more than many cars.








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