nogahorovitch I saw the tv, from 0 to 100 in the brightness setting, I think they don't use true dc dimming.
Had the opportunity to see a flicker free * Sony 65x85k through a Sony a7sIII.
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I want to use the 55x80k (or 43x80k) for PC monitor, and 15% brightness.
Is in this mode and setting it will flicker ?
nogahorovitch Yes I think it will.
Abeabe
So why did Rtings found, with their most updated testing methodology, that it doesn't flicker ?https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/sony/x80k
:-( :-(
nogahorovitch Rtings apparently say one thing and shows another, maybe they should say "this tv is flicker free enough" or something, because I think they mean the tv will not bother the majority of the people, also they get money everytime you buy products through their links.
If you look closely at their graphs in some sony tv reviews like the x80k and x85k, the pwm graphs are not flat at all and still they say these tvs are flicker free, for example I am not sensible to dithering but I am very sensible to pwm flicker and I had a Sony 50x85k that I had to return because I could't use it no matter the configuration, I felt very dizzy I had eye strain, and all the symptoms that I have with flickering led lights.
Abeabe Maybe the dizziness from the Sony 50x85k was because it is a VA panel ?
nogahorovitch I don't think so, I have pc monitors with va panels that don't bother me at all.
Abeabe Same problem here with the last year version of the tv the sony 50X85J
Rtings said is was flicker freeā¦. i bought it and had the sames syntoms of flicker tvs.
The panel is a AUO optronics (this year should be the same) and the image quality is below my 43X80D from 2016 wich is true flicker free materialā¦.
Hope QD oled tvs change thisā¦.
raven83 Hi raven83, no I have not tried qd oled, but as we move forward I think we will never be able to use modern televisions and more and more people are going to be affected by what television and technology manufacturers are doing, destroying the retinas and brains of people with their super bright flickering, LCD PWM, OLED, QDOLED, HDR, etc technology, we are living something like when leaded gasoline was invented and people used it in their cars without knowing the consequences in the future, I think that brains and eyes are not made to constantly look at super bright flickering lights, but since people keep buying their products, the manufacturers don't give a damn.
Abeabe Regarding your post! Dont give up as the true test is to experience a TV.
I give you an example i had a flicker tv from lg 32" a couple of years ago without no problem. (remember it was about 1-2 days to adjust) That really puzzles me today as at that time i didnt had this issue nor search tvs to buy based on the flicker free requirementsā¦
After that i bought 3 or 4 tvs from lg and ended returning them all not sure why and began to investigate this. On pc monitors since the 90s i had the concern of buying high refresh rate monitors (Sony Trinitron, Samtron etc ) so i figure it quite rapidly the problem. However even with the same technology could exist diferent approachs of manufacturersā¦
My advice is try at least two tvs of the same tecnhology from diferent manufacturers (each time reducing the screen size) I dont dismiss QD oled yetā¦. but i have to try itā¦..max size for me is 49" - 50" so maybe 2023 or 2024ā¦.
Right now i am expecting a Sony 48A9 48" TV so if it does not work OLED is definitely discarded from meā¦..
QD OLED is a hope to test in the futureā¦. (mini and micro led i dont believe it will be options due to the FALD system)
SAMSUNG SB95 according* to rtings is flicker free on some brightness levels
*i have some doubts about rtings analisys regarding PWM and how they test it.
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raven83 Well, i am sure they measure flicker while looking at a static white image. I dont think they do anything else. This might result in MiniLEDs and QLeds being flickerfree with white, but they may flicker on darker colors. But this is just a guess.
Sometimes they update their reviews when someone finds high frequency flicker on his device and reports on the rtings board, so they are honest enough to tell you, when they know. But i dont think that their tests are enough.
EDIT: I think it easier and cheaper to produce a IPS-panel with flicker than without. Flicker helps with color reproduction and motion handling(if users can accept PWM).
But you can use their reviews like a black list. Everything they tested to have flicker is just unusable. Like this Dell monitor from 2021. The rest is worth a shot, if you need a new device.
raven83 I haven't given up, I'd like to buy a 110-inch TV, hehe, but manufacturers instead of developing a stupid super bright HDR standard, super bad for retinas, should develop one for visual health in their devices, they take advantage of the ignorance of the people on the subject and I know it because I know a lot of people who are always red-eyed after finishing watching movies on their led televisions or after being on their computers or on their cell phones for short periods of time, but they don't care because the discomfort in their eyes is not too much, but what about the visual problems that they will develop in the future. And now manufacturers like samsung boast that their computer monitors reach 2000 nits of brightness, imagine what they will do with the advancement of technology combined with thier greed, I have hope of one day buying a good comfortable TV to watch but as we are going I doubt it.
Hi guys, any suggest for a 43" flicker free monitor or TV? Thx a lot