Are 2024 TVs Too Bright? | Why Brighter is Still Better

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 346

  • @Caleb_Denison
    @Caleb_Denison 6 місяців тому +55

    Hey everyone! TCL did 115-inch and Hisense 110-inch, not the other way around!!!! One critical component among a few I didn’t for into this video: twice the nits is NOT twice as bright! I’ll do something on that in upcoming videos. What else about brightness should we be talking about?

    • @kensingtonwick
      @kensingtonwick 6 місяців тому +1

      You must have been “dipping in the sauce” again just like at CES😆

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 6 місяців тому +2

      “The nits and bolts” I love it

    • @shazanahmed7576
      @shazanahmed7576 6 місяців тому

      Hey Caleb, I’m In a doubt on which OLED to buy between Samsung S90C and LG C3 evo . The LG is slightly expensive compared to Samsung in my country.

    • @renesandoval1454
      @renesandoval1454 6 місяців тому +1

      I would include color volume when talking about brightness. Lots of colors get washed out as the brightness increases.

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 6 місяців тому

      @@shazanahmed7576 The S90c is QD OLED, which is a better technology then non QD OLED that the C3 has. Either are excellent TVs. I think the S90c is less money right now, which really makes no sense. If you are looking for a 77", look at the S89c at bestbuy only and its always under $2k, which is an amazing deal, its basically the same as the s90c with a different stand. Have a couple LG OLEDs and love them all, they are all fantastic and they get better every year.

  • @Ultimate_Power_
    @Ultimate_Power_ 6 місяців тому +112

    "With great power….. comes a high electricity bill" -uncle Ben or something

    • @jaynotification
      @jaynotification 6 місяців тому

      😂

    • @billtinnell2206
      @billtinnell2206 6 місяців тому +2

      Yup, I agree. Most of these new brightness TVs are using a lot more electricity, especially the 85" and 98". They also give off a TON of heat too!. 99% of all TVs I've seen have very good brightness.

    • @kensingtonwick
      @kensingtonwick 6 місяців тому +1

      😂😂😂😂😂. You need to be cleansed of your “carbon sins”. Better go visit your priest😆

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 6 місяців тому +1

      My Uncle Ned used to say something like that, maybe my Uncle Ned knows your Uncle Ben?

    • @Mietas2
      @Mietas2 6 місяців тому +5

      Yes, in the past, LCD TVs would be energy efficient. Then they started to grow and get brighter and contain more powerful chips, pulling ungodly amounts of power. Nobody mentions that anymore.

  • @Caleb_Denison
    @Caleb_Denison 6 місяців тому +80

    Hey everyone! One critical component among a few I didn’t for into this video: twice the nits is NOT twice as bright! I’ll do something on that in upcoming videos. What else about brightness should we be talking about?

    • @nate19
      @nate19 6 місяців тому +4

      What should we set our backlight to on most TVs? Should we change it based on the amount of light in the room? Should we just eyeball it to something that looks good on a well lit scene?

    • @ClassyTechCalibrations
      @ClassyTechCalibrations 6 місяців тому +19

      The main problem most people don't understand about brightness with a TV is the difference in HDR PQ and SDR gamma. In SDR you can simply turn up the brightness slider to raise the APL for a bright room. In HDR the brightness is already maxed because HDR is absolute. All HDR content is designed for watching in a dark room and most aspects of the image are under 200ish nits. The average APL of most scenes are actually single or double digits.
      TVs that manipulate the PQ EOTF tracking will raise the APL inaccurately but aren't able to increase their peak brightness on highlights. This is usually done with dynamic tone mapping settings (which is not the same as static tone mapping).
      In most HDR content if one TV looks brighter than another it's not because of how many nits the TV can measure, it's because of how PQ is tracked. A 500 nit peak TV that's over tracking will look brighter than a 5000 nit peak TV that tracks PQ accurately, in most HDR content.
      When raising the tracking of PQ EOTF, the APL of the image raises which reduces dynamic range and perceived contrast.
      If in a very bright room, in most cases watching in SDR is a better option.

    • @IDDQD1984
      @IDDQD1984 6 місяців тому

      Found this usefull. I wait Philips 909 as i cant let go from ambilight. I would like to know is it plausible to have 909+ active subwoofer as some TV:s have SUB-out

    • @gurkdoinwork
      @gurkdoinwork 6 місяців тому +2

      look forward to that video. could examine dif types of display tech / related brightness. LED vs QLED vs OLED. Could test how much the automatic light sensors dim the screen at night across dif TV brands.

    • @burnsyd17
      @burnsyd17 6 місяців тому

      Another "real world" test that may help people understand brightness versus contrast is walking from a bright space into a dark space, where you essentially lose most visible contrast until your eyes adjust to the new lower "average picture level" brightness. Same applies to watching a display in too dark a space, your eye is constantly having to make large adjustments between ambient and content and you can feel "blown out" when the content rapidly changes brightness, or not perceive shadow detail in dim scenes, etc.

  • @L330HH
    @L330HH 6 місяців тому +43

    Should’ve said, “But before we get into the NITty gritty.” Would’ve been perfect 😂

    • @Hunter116
      @Hunter116 6 місяців тому +5

      That's what I thought he was about to say!

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 6 місяців тому

      Caleb does not use cheesy humor boys.... lol

    • @Midori_Hoshi
      @Midori_Hoshi 6 місяців тому +1

      I thought the same thing.

  • @travelinSmooth
    @travelinSmooth 6 місяців тому +17

    Personally I have to either turn auto brightness at night or turn down the brightness since I usually game/watch movies in a pitch black darkness.

    • @hectorj.romanp.
      @hectorj.romanp. 6 місяців тому

      In my case, the auto-brightness feature is unreliable and, in addition, I use my TV in a darkened room to reduce the screen glare.

  • @alekssl93
    @alekssl93 6 місяців тому +8

    I just got my new U8K 65in yesterday and maaan, that TV is briiiight! I placed it in a well lit living room and I still keep it at 80% max of brightness. In overall am in love with that U8K.

    • @audie-cashstack-uk4881
      @audie-cashstack-uk4881 6 місяців тому +4

      I'm 52 in May I have watched TV used tvs since early childhood I have Never NEVER watched used a tv set in a brightly lit room or with curtains open who the he'll does that

    • @hectorj.romanp.
      @hectorj.romanp. 6 місяців тому

      @@audie-cashstack-uk4881 , same here. I pull down the blackout shades in my 'cave' when watching TV because of the glare and to be able to lower the backlight settings in my TV to get better blacks. But my mom have a TV in the living room and one in the kitchen where light is necessary because it is a shared space.

    • @wingedhussar1453
      @wingedhussar1453 6 місяців тому

      Wat size

  • @puresynergyflo
    @puresynergyflo 6 місяців тому +4

    Found this helpful in regards to “nits”: The term nit is believed to come from the Latin word nitēre, "to shine", which is why the measurement is denoted as, for example, 1 nt more commonly than 1 candela per square meter (q cd/m²). 🕯️

  • @billtinnell2206
    @billtinnell2206 6 місяців тому +7

    The brightness war between all these TV companies is out of control!! In my opinion, brightness ranks well below picture clarity, processing, motion smoothing, and color. Focus on improving these every year instead of brightness.

    • @nimblegoat
      @nimblegoat 6 місяців тому

      I'm a dark room viewer , mainly love older movies , so brightness as well has a less important . Plus a 4000 nits TV in a bright room is not zero blacks ( ambient light reflecting off TV ) , so contrast less than a dark room 1500 Nit TV

    • @awfawf4546
      @awfawf4546 Місяць тому

      @@nimblegoat No matter what they say, this damages the eyes over time. Just wait, more people will have eye problems at a younger age with these huge sets and overly brightened tvs.

    • @nimblegoat
      @nimblegoat Місяць тому

      @@awfawf4546 that's why i have a bit of ambient light if I'm using my PC monitor at night , or turn the brightness down, I suppose some massive screen would take up most of your POV so actually be a bit easier - very bright vs dark is very tiring and not pleasant

  • @princevalium25
    @princevalium25 6 місяців тому +5

    I helped my parents replace our 12 year old Samsung this past summer. Their TV sits in front of a big window that lets in tons of light, so we needed something super bright. We originally went with the Samsung S95B which looked awesome, but was warped. Then the LG G2, which wasnt bright enough. Eventually I saw your video talking about how the TCL QM8 was super bright, and we went with that. Man, I didnt know a TV could burn your eyes

  • @PAPO1990
    @PAPO1990 6 місяців тому +3

    I hope we get an option to NOT do tone mapping when the TV can out perform the content. Just have the 4000 Nit content cap out at 4000 nits on the 10,000 nit TV. Maybe a middle option to only tone map it part way, expand the 4k to 5, or maybe a nice even doubling of the dynamic range to 8000 nits. Let the TV have something in reserve if it's that capable. As for the TV itself, all else being equal, yeah, the brighter the better, the only other thing we need is MUCH better ambient light sensors so moving from daytime viewing to night time viewing isn't too annoying.

  • @CasepbX
    @CasepbX 6 місяців тому +6

    I learned how bright a monitor should be.... and what limit it should be. I have a 34" Mini LED that gets to 1200 nits and oh boy it can make you squint like the sun is shining! I believe fullscreen white gets over 600 nits which isn't all that fun after a while. I'm in a pretty dark room and it can just be too bright for me at times. Now I will admit some outside scenes in games look so damn bright and nice. Explosions and fire looking super bright is also so awesome.

    • @audie-cashstack-uk4881
      @audie-cashstack-uk4881 6 місяців тому

      So does my 850 oled contrast hdr is about contrast not silly levels of brightness a torch being shined at me from the screen is very very realistic and bright

    • @Yoga_Tv_buying
      @Yoga_Tv_buying 6 місяців тому

      I know right. Distance Mattres. Environment Matters.
      In science school. Professor DE BUNK :OLED/plasma.
      D BEST condition for eyes to see--Shopping MALL light. Bright. Clean , decent distance. Bright but yr eyes see EVRYTHING long hours.
      If u have 1200 min LED monitor. It’s for IF you work Right at window day time .
      It matches IPhone 12pro brightness. That phone So bright comparing 7 8 X XS 11pro. But as soon as right at sun/by the window. Outdoor…..too dim.
      Then iPhone 14PRO came out 1700nits peak. It was like”yay life changing”
      So your monitor def mean for you to be ABLE to Brighten it up (like iPhones for Just in case). It’s critical features when u need it , u can REALLY need it :):)

  • @andrew72329
    @andrew72329 6 місяців тому +1

    I have a Samsung QN95A and I have to have it on its lowest light setting at night as it’s burns my eyes out. It’s absolutely amazing during the day though.

  • @TomideAdeleke
    @TomideAdeleke 6 місяців тому +3

    Hey Caleb, I dont have anyhting to say but thank you for the effort you put into explaining technical details of audio-visual technology.

  • @csimet
    @csimet 6 місяців тому +2

    80% of my viewing is at night and the remainder is usually with the drapes closed fully or at least partially. My S90C, even for an OLED, is plenty bright and I set it to filmmaker mode to keep it reasonable. It can be way too bright in a dark room and plenty to handle the room with the drapes open during the day. Very happy I went OLED over QLED.
    Being a photographer myself, it is a must that you learn Ansel's zone system IMHO.

    • @guru14343
      @guru14343 6 місяців тому +1

      Being overbright, would you recommend LG C3 over S90C?

    • @EverydayElectronics23
      @EverydayElectronics23 Місяць тому

      @@guru14343 for upscaling yes. if all youre watching is hd or uhd content get s90c. even though Samsung has shit qc

  • @dharmasx2
    @dharmasx2 6 місяців тому +5

    That's the reason why I prefer projectors. The indirect light is more suitable and comfortable for my eyes :)

  • @nicholasgilbert4227
    @nicholasgilbert4227 6 місяців тому +3

    I enjoyed the joking around in this video, I'm actually quite unwell today and the little laughs were nice.

    • @myrabarr7898
      @myrabarr7898 6 місяців тому

      Hope you are feeling better soon ! I too love Caleb's humor. Humor along with solid information is a great combination.

  • @trollzone1
    @trollzone1 6 місяців тому +1

    When they hit 5,000 to 10,000 nits I'll be super happy. (As an actual commercially viable and affordable products.)

  • @dotsmada2855
    @dotsmada2855 6 місяців тому +1

    I remember 20 years ago when I got my first projection type TV it lit the room up like I've never seen before. Had to squint it was so bright, or at least brighter than what I was used to. Obviously, I got used to it pretty quick. I can't imagine a TV being too bright unless it's washing out the picture and there's a lot of bloom.

  • @chrishammersley7825
    @chrishammersley7825 6 місяців тому +1

    One of the best videos I have seen. Now I understand the Tone Mapping. Thank you. Also, the processor for a TV is a big deal.

  • @sergep7578
    @sergep7578 6 місяців тому +4

    First thing I do when I get home with a new TV. Reduce the brightness from 50 to 26. I don't like staring into a light bulb.

    • @lancealex382
      @lancealex382 6 місяців тому

      Bye bye colours and HDR impact!On the plus side your TV will last ages and your eyeballs will be happier

  • @daneg
    @daneg 6 місяців тому +1

    I watch movies on my LG C2 with the lights off at night, and the white titles (especially the white "skip" button on streamers) is so bright, I sometimes squint! 😎 (always filmmaker mode) never look directly at the light! 😄

  • @dhowting
    @dhowting 6 місяців тому +1

    I like how you mentioned "squinting".....if a tv makes you squint or wince away then it's too bright. I don't mean sudden flashes or bright moments in content but a prolonged, not being able to directly stare at the screen for very long.
    Also, I think, sometimes a tv can be so bright that it washes out fine details and/or blends some of the items in the image together, losing their defined edges, especially if they are a similar colour. I would rather have a slightly LESS bright tv with vivid realistic colours and fine details than one that will chase mmu eyeballs out of the room.

    • @Yoga_Tv_buying
      @Yoga_Tv_buying 6 місяців тому

      U make excellent comment. I know right that’s how those TV’s can be dimmed (it has auto light sensor)
      LIke thats why our our iphone 15pro is 2000nits , right now at home lights on. I have it on 68% brightness , but day time by the window or outdoor I would need it to like MAX 100%.
      Caleb is telling ppl its TOO bright, as if its going to blind ppl its really NOT true.
      I have 1800 NIT TV at home VA panel. IT makes OLED look so bad. Cuz OLED”s brightness are like level 4-6( for average content) it cant properly produce content that are Natrually support to be bright , orange, yellow. , watermelon red etc. to level (5-9) level brightness for the Clean visual during the day .
      It’s like Having 330Hp Infiniti CAR with V6 Engine, we do NOT use that HIGH HP.But when going up the highway, switch lane busy high traffic, get around a slow car on highway. Dangerous situation….those HIGH HP like Snaps car up quick. So those “UN NEEDED brighness “ ppl do NOT know they need it so much until they buy the TV.
      This video is biased.

  • @thomasassim-ita1787
    @thomasassim-ita1787 6 місяців тому +5

    I love contrast in my tv a lot. It brings out the beauty in every picture. Interesting topic coz it's the contrast that will make me buy any television

    • @calgary2800
      @calgary2800 6 місяців тому +1

      Yes, turn up the contrast a bit and turn down the brightness is a way to make the tv look much better.

  • @TomGur147
    @TomGur147 6 місяців тому +3

    I have the LG G3 and honestly I find the hdr highlights far too bright. Light coming through windows in the background/ceiling lights, skies (even on overcast days) are far brighter than they would be in real life and it just feels unnatural to me. Otherwise picture quality is superb and not all discs/shows are like this. In fact it’s shows on Apple TV that seem overly bright to me.

  • @madpistol
    @madpistol 6 місяців тому +1

    My Samsung Q90R from 2019 makes my eyes hurt from its brightness sometimes, and it can only (lol) hit around 1400 nits peak. I'm here for the new TVs, but I'm far more interested in processing and picture clarity than I am searing brightness.

  • @amitavraja3385
    @amitavraja3385 6 місяців тому +1

    Look forward to seeing your reviews in the light of tone mapping and brightness, how brightness is used effectively in tone mapping that’s an interesting part of the review that’s not often covered. Just because a TV can get insanely bright doesn’t mean it’s using its brightness effectively. Also the things to consider is shadow details and coming out of black, which is a shortcoming for OLED TVs. I think we are so focused on brightness that we forget other things like shadow details.

  • @buschg7106
    @buschg7106 6 місяців тому

    For me, my 85-inch QM8 requires the brightness turned down in my all windows living room. Rather that than underpowered. I love that it highlights the, umm, highlights incredibly well without the entire screen needing to be too bright/ washed out. It even maintains the blacks while doing so on a large scale.

  • @johninmontrealjt437
    @johninmontrealjt437 6 місяців тому +1

    "Are 2024 TVs Too Bright?"... excellent question.
    I recently moved from a 9-year old 55-inch LG TV to a new 65-inch Sony QD-OLED (A95L)... We watch television in a dark room with ambient lighting, picture set to "professional", Dolby Vision Dark, plus a few recommended picture setting tweaks.
    Is it too bright (despite reviews saying it's "not the brightest" OLED out there)?
    For most viewing, it does an exceptional job. Brightness is perfectly fine.
    But there are a couple of instances where I might consider it a little "too much"...
    -some white end credits on a black background perhaps "pop" a bit more than they need to.
    -commercials that end with a brand logo on a completely white background (filling the entire screen) can definitely wake me out of a semi-slumber late at night!

    • @amitavraja3385
      @amitavraja3385 6 місяців тому +3

      A95L has similar brightness as the LG G3. The Sony balances brightness with shadow details beautifully, unlike other TVs.

    • @l21n18
      @l21n18 6 місяців тому

      Thing is for older content it was never intended to be shown that way

  • @KiLLED5639
    @KiLLED5639 6 місяців тому +3

    Hi digital trends, I got a question or two.
    For content that's mastered at a lower brightness than a TV, why would the TV tone map the brightness up instead of leaving it at the native brightness of the content?
    I guess I'm just biased towards watching a content at its native settings, but I guess another question is do TVs automatically tone map brightness of the content up to match the TV or can we stop that in the TV settings?

  • @midnight_yota
    @midnight_yota 6 місяців тому +3

    That Nituation joke was FANtastic 😂

  • @JamesRussoMillas
    @JamesRussoMillas 5 місяців тому

    Brightness has become a thing because many people (myself included) are under the impression that an OLED tv isn't bright enough to be usable in a room that gets a lot of natural light. The S90C handles reflections so well though that I think it makes up for it

  • @radiorexandy
    @radiorexandy 6 місяців тому +1

    Reminds me of the "brightness wars" of the late sixties and early seventies where the TV set manufacturers increased brightness by increasing the high voltsge on the picture tubes. This produced x-rays at hazardous levels and the government had to step in to stop this.
    Well, at least todays' sets don't produce x-rays!

  • @mugishasam1948
    @mugishasam1948 6 місяців тому +6

    That TCL is insane,, some of us here still using 8 years old sony😢 i don't really understand anything you're saying, but just enjoy listening to you😊

    • @freepin4013
      @freepin4013 6 місяців тому

      I use an over 13 year old sharp aquos ☠️☠️☠️

    • @MWM1293
      @MWM1293 6 місяців тому

      @@freepin4013sheesh, how!?

    • @alexanderliustar
      @alexanderliustar 6 місяців тому +1

      15 year old Sony DKL here. Getting a new Hisense U7K tomorrow

    • @freepin4013
      @freepin4013 6 місяців тому +1

      @@alexanderliustar have fun with the new tv. In about 2 months I'm getting a combo of the 65 inch S95C and the soundbar hw-q990c

  • @StarExplorer123
    @StarExplorer123 6 місяців тому +2

    For TVs brighter than 2000 NITs, do you recommend sunblock? Will SPF 30 be enough?

  • @user-ip9ss2bh3d
    @user-ip9ss2bh3d 6 місяців тому

    I love my brandy new 75 inch Hisense U8k, but I find myself dialing back on the brightness. Maybe my feelings will change once I get used to it.I definitely don’t have to worry about it being in a bright room

  • @mortal_gaming89
    @mortal_gaming89 6 місяців тому

    I have been recently looking into TV's around the 75" range to try to get something not so pricey as OLED. I've only heard of Hisense in walmart so assumed it was a very cheap option but never heard of TCL at all. Until your videos (and other reviewers), since you and others mentioned these 2 manufacturers in particular are now rapidly climbing up the scales to meet the quality of much better known branding (Samsung and LG). Your videos have really answered a lot of questions and even comparisons between the brands. Great work on the videos and your explanations of roughly how certain features are accomplished.

    • @Mr.Martini549
      @Mr.Martini549 6 місяців тому +1

      My brother-in-law has a TCL/Roku TV. I'm always amazed by the color & picture! TCL is legit.

  • @Best-mx2of
    @Best-mx2of 5 місяців тому

    I dropped my tv backlight brightness down to 13 and normal brightness at 50%, still shows well.

  • @LiquidToast12
    @LiquidToast12 6 місяців тому

    I have an LG C1, and the default brightness levels are PERFECT. Anything brighter than that would hurt my eyes to watch in the dark.

  • @tordb
    @tordb 6 місяців тому +2

    Bought a Samsung S90C yesterday and returned it. I originally had an LG C1 and the Samsung looked very oversaturated and extremely bright. I guess I'm not meant to get a 2nd gen OLED panel.

    • @blb128
      @blb128 6 місяців тому +1

      In standard mode, it will look like that. Movie mode or film maker mode fixes that. You just returned a top notch tv.

    • @guru14343
      @guru14343 6 місяців тому

      I’m stuck between S90C and C3. S90C looks better in side by side comparison, but I want C3 to win. I’m biased towards LG. Would you add anything? How bright content from S90C didn’t impress you?

  • @JookerSK
    @JookerSK 6 місяців тому

    Just love that you mixed the tv sizes in the begging :D It is OK. TCL announced a 115 inch mini LED TV, and Hisense has the 110 Inch 10K nit mini LED TV. :D

  • @timbacchus
    @timbacchus 6 місяців тому

    I like a lot of brightness because my eyes are 74 years old. I only have room for a 43 inch TV I would think if I had a very large TV then I would not have to have so much brightness.

  • @DIYerGuy
    @DIYerGuy 6 місяців тому

    Very interesting and worthwhile coverage of nits and tone-mapping. I would love to see your reviews on the TCL 115-inch and the Hisense 110-inch TVs. I've subscribed!

  • @madcalm2024
    @madcalm2024 6 місяців тому +1

    The high brigtness is a side effect of increasing number of LEDs in miniLEDs to reach the contrast of OLEDs )) More LEDs = better local dimming = less power [0.1.. 0.2 W] per single LED = less limited common brightness. Thank to BoE, TCL, Hisense & SkyWorth which push their vision that miniLED/microLED is more relerant technology than OLED. OLEDs have had to react and participate in this race ))

  • @mattgiunt
    @mattgiunt 6 місяців тому +1

    Super bright tvs make content look like cartoons. Very happy with natural look of my A80L

  • @hitardo
    @hitardo 6 місяців тому

    My main issue with brightness is reliability.
    Meaning, if the TV has the brightness all the way up, the stress on all the components will be higher (e.g., voltage regulator, voltage supply, LEDs), which will hurt the TV reliability, hence, its longevity.
    I really love to have a great contrast experience, with the Sun or a flame being bright, and a night scene or a indoors shot to be dim - and to have the contrast between the two.
    However, I am quite conscious on the longevity on the equipment - which I expect, at least, 10 years.
    To achieve a good balance, I tend to use my TV on Power Saving mode on (typically in Auto, or even Medium), whenever my wife is watching her soap opera, or my kid is watching cartoons.
    Whenever I come and sit down to watch a movie, I immediately notice it and disable the Power Saving mode.
    However, this sometimes leaves my family mad - and my kid will eventually figure out how to disable the Power Saving mode...

  • @user-uv8it3tp3s
    @user-uv8it3tp3s 6 місяців тому +2

    I need a tv for my dark gaming room I have yes issues therefore I don’t want to be to bright it hurts my eyes 👀 I need for gaming will the new LG oled G4 or the new M4 will be to bright ? Will they be great for gaming ?

  • @slimSharo
    @slimSharo 6 місяців тому +1

    Why does my 720p phone show this in great detail? All the blacks and vividness 😆

  • @seaofcuriosity
    @seaofcuriosity 6 місяців тому

    I had a normal led tv and I hated to watch it not because of its picture quality but because it caused me a headache and my eyes would stress out after 2-3 hours. And if i turned down the brightness, every color became a shade of black which itself is grey.
    So i bought oled and now i can watch tv for hours without my eyes paining or stressing out. And I keep the brightness at 25 percent or at night i would crank it down to 20 percent without any effect on color performance.

  • @curtisbme
    @curtisbme 6 місяців тому

    I like how the peak Nits used to be 10% window. Then TV manufacturers started to reduce that to 3% window (which is a joke) and most reviewers state that new higher number, without noting the tiny % of the screen. Next up will be 1% claims. Of course the length of time and what the white point is set at will be left out.

  • @LeezahB
    @LeezahB 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for your clarity and illuminating explanation of TV brightness. I always learn something, plus you are funny and entertaining. Great job!!

  • @downtowngary6646
    @downtowngary6646 6 місяців тому +1

    As you just said Caleb, twice the nits isn’t twice as bright. Just like twice the watts in an amp isn’t anywhere near twice as loud. YOU REALLY NEED TO DEEP DIVE A VIDEO ON THIS and help save the world from this insanity! The HDR superheroes are counting on you.

  • @dizzywow
    @dizzywow 6 місяців тому

    When an ad is displayed that is almost all-white or all yellow. Blinding. Me: Goes into the service menu of my new Sony X90L and turns gain WAY down on all colors RGB. No, the "brightness control" didn't do it for me.

  • @nathangreen3661
    @nathangreen3661 6 місяців тому

    Caleb remember the original 2018 vizio PQ65F1 Quantum Dot LED. That tv hit 2500 nits back then and was searingly bright.

  • @t7489
    @t7489 5 місяців тому

    I keep my 2017 b7 at about 75-80% brightness. More than that and my eyes strain

  • @hectorj.romanp.
    @hectorj.romanp. 6 місяців тому +1

    Well, one of the reasons a watch TV in a darkened room is because of the glare. It's distracting to see my face and clothes reflected on the screen.

  • @saulgoodman2018
    @saulgoodman2018 6 місяців тому

    All the TV's you showed in this video, looks blown out on my TV.

    • @ryans413
      @ryans413 5 місяців тому

      Because they are the over brightness washes out the inky colours.

  • @midnight_yota
    @midnight_yota 6 місяців тому +1

    I’m dying at all these Nit jokes 😂

  • @felixjosegacosta
    @felixjosegacosta 6 місяців тому

    I don't know what will be the limit but I got a TCL 85" QM8 and I'm only using 40% of the brightness and still is way more bright than a TCL 75" R646 I also have. I feel so much brigness is not really needed, just a marketing number when is greater that a giving number of nits that frankly, I don't have an idea which it is.

  • @dennisschnobrich9288
    @dennisschnobrich9288 5 місяців тому

    I own a LG UR9000 43" and the brightness is not good, outdoor scenes are marginal and indoor screens are too dark. I have the brightness turned all the way up

  • @mediamadness969
    @mediamadness969 6 місяців тому

    My wife is obsessed with brightness!
    Exactly why we have a 55 inch LG G3 and a 65 inch Sony A95L 🤣

  • @tyraelhermosa
    @tyraelhermosa 6 місяців тому +1

    Bravo on the delivery of those puns 👏

  • @JohnnyJamesGio
    @JohnnyJamesGio 6 місяців тому +1

    Such an insightful and informative video, Thanks Caleb!

  • @jFranco1994
    @jFranco1994 6 місяців тому +1

    Excited for the LG G4!

  • @mr_ice117
    @mr_ice117 6 місяців тому

    I like the brightness up, mainly cause they keep making movies darker and darker so i gotta keep pumping up the brightness higher and higher. So bright i need sunglasses haha, sadly my tv has a stupid light sensor that turns the brightness up or down automatically depending on the brightness of the room that i cant turn off

  • @Imakemovies67
    @Imakemovies67 6 місяців тому

    TV's that are too bright are not the issue. There should be NO REASON to have to turn up the TV to hear dialog and turn down the TV when music plays. Soundbars only make it worse. Either ALL film production companies have forgotten how to mix their content, OR today's smart TV's really aren't very smart.

  • @HuskysamaCR
    @HuskysamaCR 6 місяців тому +2

    Those jokes are on fire my man haha, thanks for the video.

  • @PhiLLyPhiLLz
    @PhiLLyPhiLLz 6 місяців тому +2

    2,000 peak brightness is more than enough. I constantly have to put my brightness lower at night because the QM8 is just so bright.

    • @AntonioCunningham
      @AntonioCunningham 6 місяців тому

      That's what I fear. I've been looking at this TV, but I don't want something too bright and that seems to be what so many TV reviewers care about, that and TV size. Wheel

  • @techsamurai11
    @techsamurai11 6 місяців тому

    Double the nits is not twice as bright! That's important to know...
    Brightness has a massive toll on eyestrain. I use a light sensor which works great on an old Sony but I bumped the backlight from 7 to 9 or max to make the image brighter and it does pop incredibly during the day and night. BUT when I switch from 9 to 7, my eyes relax a lot more. It's uncanny because I actually felt my retinas relax.

  • @CinemaPunk
    @CinemaPunk 6 місяців тому

    just noticed a 2018 samsung q9fn model in this video.

  • @bewhee
    @bewhee 6 місяців тому

    Can you do a video to explain the difference between static tone mapping and active/dynamic tone mapping and why the former is usually a lot dimmer than the latter?
    Just about anyone out there says that static is supposed to give you what the creator intended, but I'm not so sure anymore. Unless you have the exact same range on your TV as the movie was mastered at, and see a 1:1 representation of the content, you always have some tone mapping so why is static tone mapping a better option?

  • @mauriciot.p.3576
    @mauriciot.p.3576 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for this video, love all your content. Have a TV website myself (as a hobby, here in Brazil)

  • @SyraphEntertainment
    @SyraphEntertainment 6 місяців тому

    Sure getting brighter and brighter is great, but give me the option to turn it all the way down too. Got a Sony X93 last year and that tv is still way too bright at the lowest setting (energy saving maxed, brightness and contrast lowered all the way) for those times where I would want to run a YT vid in the background late at night.

  • @walterbison
    @walterbison 6 місяців тому

    I don't need headaches and eye fatigue thanks.

  • @majesticf0x130
    @majesticf0x130 6 місяців тому +2

    Lets get down to the nitty gritty

  • @joewhip9303
    @joewhip9303 6 місяців тому

    I have a 83” Sony Master Series A90j in my theater room. I would not want it any brighter. Also have a 77 95l in another location in a non light controlled room. Plenty bright for me in pro mode.

  • @welive2dive
    @welive2dive 6 місяців тому

    Very informative. For those of us with Macular Degeneration, a well balanced BRIGHT TV is a must. GOT and the Witcher were frustrating to watch. Thankfully, in the darker sequences my wife could tell me what was going on.

  • @nathanhighvoltage5259
    @nathanhighvoltage5259 6 місяців тому

    I have a Sony A90K 42. Perfect for my desk set up with my ps5 with a max brights of 640 nits. I feel it is a bit dim. I hope 2024 Sony comes with a new model that can get a bit brighter

  • @svr5423
    @svr5423 5 місяців тому

    That "tone mapping" doesn't make any sense to me.
    Every pixel has an associated brightness. These are not absolut numbers. It's more of a range between 0 to 100%.
    So on a 500nit display, a value of 50% would look brighter in absolute measure than on a 250nit display.
    TVs traditionally have a reduced set of dynamic range, which is why dark grey colors would normally be rendered black. Hence it is often necessary to reduce the dynamic range on your device if the output is a TV and not a regular monitor.

  • @tmr626
    @tmr626 6 місяців тому

    Caleb, it would be interesting to find out how much your electricity rates differ from the smallest to the largest of TV's.

  • @NordicNomadv
    @NordicNomadv 6 місяців тому

    a few years back i have seen a documentation about Taiwan's children, because 80-90% of children have to use glasses there... so scientists did some research to see if it it was related to screen time, it turns out it was not screen time but low brightness... children spend a lot more time inside and school. so by law, now every classroom has to be at least 550nits bright, because this is the minimum brightness we require to not get bad eyes. it is a boomer that most monitors even can not hit the HDR1000 spec, because the HDR1000spec requires a minimum of 600nits sustained 100% brightness.

  • @movie_av_impulse
    @movie_av_impulse 6 місяців тому

    We'll love the NIT NERD MERCH 😂 I think you know why Caleb! I am interested to see how tcl & Hisense plan to execute their light control. But I'm thinking you're right. They're claims of 5, 000 and 10,000 nits is going to be maybe and this is a big maybe on a 3% window.. cuz even at 10% think about it. 10% on 115 in screen. That's still a lot of ground to cover.. and I will say this and you can mark my words on it. Those huge screens are going to be filled with DSE. Here's why I say this because the tolerance is a little bit slimmer with a bigger screen because they'll be willing to let go more than they would on a smaller screen. At least that is to my understanding when it comes to manufacturers and their tolerance for DSE. But only time will tell

  • @Eddyhand71
    @Eddyhand71 6 місяців тому

    brightness matters, like size. i hear its rough when you dont have it

  • @christianbrindamour6826
    @christianbrindamour6826 6 місяців тому

    Very informative, thanks, how does this apply to regular or cable tv, it seems you were only br8nging up hdr type content?

  • @maritimemetaldoc6812
    @maritimemetaldoc6812 6 місяців тому +1

    I just bought a Sony X90L to replace an old LG 4K for my bedroom. I had to turn down the brightness to 7 on the Sony. It was far to bright. the old LG i never touch the default brightness for the 10 years I've owned it. So yes TVs are getting to bright. They might look great in show rooms but for personal spaces its not needed.

  • @AeroDude73
    @AeroDude73 6 місяців тому +1

    Some people are naturally funny. And then there’s This video… 🙄🤨🤦‍♂️

  • @MrHallonz
    @MrHallonz 6 місяців тому

    Brightness and cd/m2 figures for TVs are the same as what (dynamic) on/off contrast ratio is for projectors - bragging rights used to promote sales that really tell very little about the actual performance of the device. To show how silly this pursuit is - an OLED with 600cd/m2 has equal contrast ratio to an OLED of 1500cd/m2 since black is always zero. And as Caleb mentioned - contrast is what really matters.
    Biggest reason to get a higher brightness TV is if the room requires it due to ambient light - to regain some of that contrast lost when the black level is effectively raised and to overcome glare.

    • @l21n18
      @l21n18 6 місяців тому

      Doesn’t hdr content require 1000?

    • @MrHallonz
      @MrHallonz 6 місяців тому +1

      @@l21n18 As per UHD Alliance: ”The HDR display must have either a peak brightness of over 1000 cd/m2 and a black level less than 0.05 cd/m2 (a contrast ratio of at least 20,000:1) or a peak brightness of over 540 cd/m2 and a black level less than 0.0005 cd/m2 (a contrast ratio of at least 1,080,000:1)”. So short answer - no. Oleds qualify thanks to the second part of the above i.e >540 cd/m2 and 0 black level. And thanks to that zero black level provide tons more contrast - which is what HDR is all about to begin with. :)

  • @Werpet7
    @Werpet7 6 місяців тому

    I don't need a brighter TV than my G3. It had blinded me a couple of times already in some games and movies and anything more than that would be painful. Unless of course used in a bright room which isn't my case.

  • @jiggerypokery2962
    @jiggerypokery2962 6 місяців тому

    I like how you can tell he really had fun with the intro.

  • @asafblasbergvideographer
    @asafblasbergvideographer 6 місяців тому

    Brightness is great but if the TV’s color gamut is sub-par it doesn’t really help. Take a perfect example: X95J. Has excellent brightness but DCI-P3 coverage is a bit weak and colors are a bit undersaturated

    • @asafblasbergvideographer
      @asafblasbergvideographer 6 місяців тому

      I’m glad that Caleb points out that when TV manufacturers mention 2500 nits that its not the full field windows rating, it’s most likely the small 3%-5% window

  • @Ariane-Bouchard
    @Ariane-Bouchard 6 місяців тому

    What I'm really hoping is that they get brightness sensing right. I've never in my life encountered an auto brightness sensor that did its job right. Be it my phone or my TV, they're always too bright in the dark and not bright enough in the light. And there's no way to adjust it except by going full manual, which is a huge pain.

    • @Yoga_Tv_buying
      @Yoga_Tv_buying 6 місяців тому

      Hey then u might have been finding one that does the sensor right this time . Look out for SHARP Aquos panels, and Hisense. I used their flagship SHARP (made in Japan) always had auto sensor on the entire time.
      Now I am with 2 HIsense flagship. Their sensors are great. (Hisense bought SHARP in 2014 temporarily tho, sharp parent company bought itself back later) yeah there TONs TONS more advanced technology in Hisense most ppl didnt even know they needed. Like 18 feet voice command. High sensitive voice command, u can talk to GOOGLE Alexa, ask tv shut off, turn on, find the show, save the show etc. all sorts, turn up volume . Some random stuff. Cheaper tv with similar feature only go 9ft, n ppl have to Shout to get TV to hear it. lol. N D Hisense remote stands up right on the table liek water bottle so u don’t have to lay it flat annoying the table space.

  • @ebigford34
    @ebigford34 6 місяців тому +2

    I just went from a 2018 TCL 5 series that was reviewed at ~300 nits (10% window) to a new Samsung S89C (smoking BB deal!). After setting up the QD-OLED to some of the shared calibration settings, holy crap, too bright for me. Watching streaming HDR10 content when the "Skip Intro" button would pop up, it was like tesla headlights in oncoming traffic. Way too much. I turned down some settings to suit. Its also like my Samsung S22 ultra phone, whatever the peak setting is, I run mine about 40% and it is insane bright.

  • @thefix-itguyreviewer8151
    @thefix-itguyreviewer8151 6 місяців тому

    You didn't mention Samsung I think they make most of the screens for a lot of the companies.
    You didn't mention Samsung's tone mapping interestingly enough

  • @curtyman11
    @curtyman11 6 місяців тому

    The TCL is 115 inch and the Hisense is 110 inch. I noticed you said the opposite.

  • @michaelkaster5058
    @michaelkaster5058 6 місяців тому

    I was told 30k nit range is what you would need to replicate most of the way to a gorgeous sunset on a tv, so hold out until the 8k 30k nirvana before you buy :)

  • @michaelbeckerman7532
    @michaelbeckerman7532 6 місяців тому

    Having a really bright screen is great, but there's an inherent problem with the "Brightness Wars" that are well under way now: it sucks all the air out of the room and minimizes the importance of every OTHER aspect of the TV that people really should be considering and factoring into their buying decisions. By making everyone think that brightness is the single most important factor to be considered when buying a new TV lower-end manufacturers (without the technical/design chops to really build superior displays) can fool consumers into buying inferior, but brighter TVs. When we all just get tunnel vision and believe that brighter ALWAYS equals better no matter what else the TV has to offer (and then we act on that belief), everyone loses.

  • @petsquirrelable
    @petsquirrelable 6 місяців тому +1

    If you need high brightness you have your TV in the wrong room. Put some curtains up. The TV will look better and you won’t have to torch your retinas.

    • @Yoga_Tv_buying
      @Yoga_Tv_buying 6 місяців тому

      I am in HUGE bright room corner”L” window. 18 feet long window. ONCE u use flagship LED/QLED u CANT go back. It’s like the same thing with ppl owning Tesla cant explain that to GAS car owner.
      It actually is MORE soothing in NOT blinding but over all bright room watching bright tv. Than in d DARK watching (dim tv).
      Kinda like if u watch tv at night is like looking at light bulb ….car light, eyes will find it “wow” too bright. But day time u do NOT even see car lights on if during the day.
      IF i like to eat meal by my window…drink coffee on spring bright day. Having Bright Tv is god sent.
      NO joke if u see HIghway Billboard, NBA nfl tv….d brighter the MORE comfortable for eyes to see.
      IN science program. It’s well understood ppl have MORE eye issue watching tv in pitch black room long time. BEST comfortable lighting for eyes for seeing Any object is “SHOPPING MALL” bright clean light.
      As long as tv slightly matching n 1 hair brighter than the environment , n with good distance it’s Way more enjoyable. 😊

  • @MrMegan1962
    @MrMegan1962 6 місяців тому

    Just bought 85 inch QN 90C Samsung,2000 nits. When i was at school nits were something the nurse came in to get rid of.

    • @calgary2800
      @calgary2800 6 місяців тому

      I have this too in 85 as well. Best tv I have ever had.

    • @MrMegan1962
      @MrMegan1962 6 місяців тому

      @@calgary2800 🇬🇧🇬🇧👍👍👍👍

  • @rickoshay-mh9rz
    @rickoshay-mh9rz 6 місяців тому

    Ever since 4k, even the new full hd tvs are super bright. I am still using Sony 2016 r352d full hd tv. Visuals are clearer and more natural. 4k tvs are just very hard to look at. Peoples' faces look really bright and unnatural. And if you dare to watch sd content from 80s or 90s, you will only see people blurred and broken pixels. Come to think of it, tvs from late 90s and early 2000s had way more natural pictures. During that time, I could only do window shopping and marvel at those projection tvs and plasma tvs. Didn't have any money. Now that I have money, I have bought and returned 7 tvs in the last 5 years. What are the tv companies doing? Or is it just me?

  • @Kane.JimLahey.
    @Kane.JimLahey. 6 місяців тому +3

    I always keep my blacklight at 0

    • @PSYCHOV3N0M
      @PSYCHOV3N0M 6 місяців тому +2

      You wouldn't have that problem if you went with OLED.

  • @MadcapMatt
    @MadcapMatt 6 місяців тому

    I recently got a new x93L to replace my aging B8 OLED. I absolutely love how much more contrast it has. I gladly took the brightness increase that I lost from the inky black of the OLED. I'm currently rewatching some of my favorite movies to experience them in a totally different way.