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-Philips TV Line-up 2020-
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<blockquote data-quote="xavito" data-source="post: 1058540573" data-attributes="member: 13356"><p>65"...[avforums.com]...Philips<span style="color: #FF8C00"> 65OLED805 review</span>...<a href="https://www.avforums.com/reviews/philips-oled805-review.17861" target="_blank">https://www.avforums.com/reviews/philips-oled805-review.17861</a></p><p></p><p></p><p>Peak brightness vs. Window size</p><p><img src="https://www.avforums.com/image.php?imageparameters=editorial/products/8adbc065fb128d2e5e5cffc82706b770_13418.jpg|1280|0" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong><em>Verdict</em></strong></p><p></p><p><em>Philips has a confident spring in its step and is on a roll when it comes to its recent OLED TVs. It offers a real alternative to the big names and that includes features and performance that can match or even better those models most would consider to be the best on the market. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>The Philips offers almost everything consumers will be looking for from an OLED TV with the one exception of gaming. You can game on the Philips, but it doesn’t have any HDMI 2.1 inputs or 2.1 features like VRR or ALLM, plus the input lag is 34ms, which is slower than most of its peers. But, it is clear that, like Panasonic, the Philips line up of OLEDs is aimed at producing the best image quality for SDR and HDR, with emphasis on video processing from the P5 chip on the Philips. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>With film and TV content in SDR the OLED805 is outstanding with excellent image accuracy to the industry standards and the type of cinematic images you would expect from one of the best current OLED TVs. The Philips also has terrific motion for 24fps material along with accurate skin tones and balanced colours, mixed with superb just above black detail retrieval that brings content to life. The HDR performance is also exceptionally good with stunning peak brightness on offer that is well above the average seen on 2020 OLEDs (except the Panasonic HZ2000). This helps breath life into HDR content with magnificent dynamic range and visible specular highlight detail usually lost or clipped on other OLED sets. The tone mapping is also superb with both 1000 and 4000 nit masters being portrayed effectively without unnecessary image dimming. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>So if you are a movie purist and looking for image accuracy, the Philips OLED805 is first class and offers the type of performance that makes film content stand out. But, if you are not as pure in your viewing and like to dabble with Vivid & Standard mode along with motion smoothing, you will have an absolute blast with the 805 and the P5 video processing chip. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Overall, the Philips OLED805 is one of the very best OLED TVs we have seen so far this year and certainly competes strongly in the SDR and HDR image quality and accuracy stakes. Plus, if you are not one who follows the standards, the video processing and image manipulation features provided are the best on the market in terms of not just providing a bright and garish image, but one that allows a good deal of experimentation and performance that is balanced without being bright, for brightness sake. To wrap up it is also, at the time of this review, cheaper than its main rivals from Sony, Panasonic and LG. It's a Best Buy!</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="xavito, post: 1058540573, member: 13356"] 65"...[avforums.com]...Philips[COLOR="#FF8C00"] 65OLED805 review[/COLOR]...[URL="https://www.avforums.com/reviews/philips-oled805-review.17861"]https://www.avforums.com/reviews/philips-oled805-review.17861[/URL] Peak brightness vs. Window size [IMG]https://www.avforums.com/image.php?imageparameters=editorial/products/8adbc065fb128d2e5e5cffc82706b770_13418.jpg|1280|0[/IMG] [B][I]Verdict[/I][/B] [I]Philips has a confident spring in its step and is on a roll when it comes to its recent OLED TVs. It offers a real alternative to the big names and that includes features and performance that can match or even better those models most would consider to be the best on the market. The Philips offers almost everything consumers will be looking for from an OLED TV with the one exception of gaming. You can game on the Philips, but it doesn’t have any HDMI 2.1 inputs or 2.1 features like VRR or ALLM, plus the input lag is 34ms, which is slower than most of its peers. But, it is clear that, like Panasonic, the Philips line up of OLEDs is aimed at producing the best image quality for SDR and HDR, with emphasis on video processing from the P5 chip on the Philips. With film and TV content in SDR the OLED805 is outstanding with excellent image accuracy to the industry standards and the type of cinematic images you would expect from one of the best current OLED TVs. The Philips also has terrific motion for 24fps material along with accurate skin tones and balanced colours, mixed with superb just above black detail retrieval that brings content to life. The HDR performance is also exceptionally good with stunning peak brightness on offer that is well above the average seen on 2020 OLEDs (except the Panasonic HZ2000). This helps breath life into HDR content with magnificent dynamic range and visible specular highlight detail usually lost or clipped on other OLED sets. The tone mapping is also superb with both 1000 and 4000 nit masters being portrayed effectively without unnecessary image dimming. So if you are a movie purist and looking for image accuracy, the Philips OLED805 is first class and offers the type of performance that makes film content stand out. But, if you are not as pure in your viewing and like to dabble with Vivid & Standard mode along with motion smoothing, you will have an absolute blast with the 805 and the P5 video processing chip. Overall, the Philips OLED805 is one of the very best OLED TVs we have seen so far this year and certainly competes strongly in the SDR and HDR image quality and accuracy stakes. Plus, if you are not one who follows the standards, the video processing and image manipulation features provided are the best on the market in terms of not just providing a bright and garish image, but one that allows a good deal of experimentation and performance that is balanced without being bright, for brightness sake. To wrap up it is also, at the time of this review, cheaper than its main rivals from Sony, Panasonic and LG. It's a Best Buy![/I] [/QUOTE]
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