#1
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Sony 4tv looks terrible
Few year old model well it’s not used much hours .
My newest tv tho Tried watching u verse cable service on it and it’s super blurry ish , I’d take a picture but iPhone makes it look clearer . https://www.gadgetreview.com/sony-55x810c-4k-tv-review Has some blooming on movies but it looks much worse for cable tv Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
#2
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Sony 4tv looks terrible
I take it this is normal why are 4k TVs even sold ?? If they look so bad
No one else have any issues with these new bad looking 4k TVs ??? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Last edited by KingAzazel; 01-26-2021 at 05:58 PM. |
#3
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Any ideas 💡?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
#4
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Do you have any way of feeding it 4K to see if that looks good? It could be suffering from the same lousy upscaling that makes VHS internally uprezed by an HD flat screen loose substantially worse than on a CRT set of the same screen size.
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
#5
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I-Phone shot makes it look better? That's a little suspicious.
Have you tried playing a DVD (not Blu Ray)? How does that look? How crappy is your U-Verse source? Maybe this set is just revealing that, and you should sit further from the screen. |
Audiokarma |
#6
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Quote:
Most of the programing I watch isn't high def. I have a few convertors to convert HDMI to analog and one that converts HDMI to component video. Toshiba refers to it as Colorstream. |
#7
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Have to proof read a little closer I still have a CRT set!
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#8
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I know almost zero about HDTV but... When it came out I noticed high
end sets gave a great pix on digital or NTSC stations. Cheap sets gave a CRAP NTSC pix but HD was good. I had to be sure crap sets ran HD or everyone would walk. No big deal as you only made abt $30 on a 13" set but it may apply here. 73 Zeno LFOD ! |
#9
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Some early sets did have poor upscaling, but that should have been fixed in recent years.
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#10
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Depending on the box they provide, it can look so bad it's nearly unwatchable.
Back about 10 years ago, I got a call to check an RCA with a poor picture. I arrived and the picture was hard to describe. It was an RCA CTC177 which, although low end, were very good performers in general. I did a quick grey scale (it was off) and focus adjustment, but the picture was lifeless with a smear to it. They had no DVD player but had an old VHS in the closet that still worked. I hooked up the VHS with a pre-recorded Western and the VHS blew the U-Verse box away. I noticed the same on satellite boxes, the Samsung base model being the worst by far. After that, whenever I did any home service on RPTVs, I had the customer call and complain about poor resolution. They usually got a better box after calling. John |
Audiokarma |
#11
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Not all HDMI cables can transmit a 4k signal. The cable needs to be rated something like HDMI standard 2.0A or higher for a 4k signal. (it's been a while since I sold that stuff, so the designation may be wrong).
When we displayed these things in store we found that an old cable, no matter the brand or quality, could greatly damage the video quality. |
#12
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I have a Toshiba 25 inch set here on cable.No flat screens at the moment on cable ..Digital cable looks fine here with Comcast.Years ago it was blocky/pixalized .They have clean it over the years.Once in a while there is drop out.
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#13
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Quote:
BTW, I don't know what it was that made cheap HDTVs give such a poor picture when fed an NTSC (analog) signal, unless the signal processing systems in those sets weren't that good to begin with (poor quality jungle ICs, for example). I would think most HDTVs would produce at least a passable picture if fed a half-decent NTSC signal; of course, if the signal quality is poor, the picture quality will be poor or unusable as well (GIGO: garbage in, garbage out). I've had Spectrum TV service since I've lived here (20+ years), even before the DTV transition, and have never had even five minutes worth of trouble with it; however, I have Spectrum's lowest level of service ("streaming" service, which does not use a cable box), and couldn't be happier. No cable box means I do not have to be concerned about an extra charge on my bill (this is important to me since I am a senior citizen on a fixed income), not to mention fewer cables dangling around behind the TV.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 03-29-2023 at 07:36 PM. |
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