| finalrpgfantasy said: Does all 4k TVs supports HDR? The only ones I can find are Samsung TVs and they are expensive. |
No, it's brand new. If it doesn't have that logo of Sony's version of it than it doesn't have it.
Thus, in 2016, “UHD Premium” HDR 4K TVs only consist of the 2015 Samsung and Sony flagship televisions, the SUHD JS9500 and the Sony XBR-X940C, and in the entire 2016 lines of SUHD and top-shelf 4K TVs from both companies. These would be the Samsung KS-Series SUHD models and Sony’s XBR-XD Series 2016 Bravia 4K TVs like the X850D, X900D and X940D.
For OLED: only one, the late 2015 EF9500 could be considered an HDR OLED model, with only the 2016 OLED Signature G6 4K TV being a truly HDR OLED model.
http://4k.com/high-dynamic-range-4k-tvs-everything-need-know-hdr-contrast-wide-color-gamut-tvs-content-offer/
Either of those logos ensures:
- Display resolution: minimum of 3840 x 2160 pixels
- Color bit depth: 10-bit signal
- Color Palette: (Wide Color Gamut)
- Signal Input: BT.2020 color representation
- Display Reproduction: More than 93% of the DCI P3 color spectrum
- High Dynamic Range
- SMPTE ST2084 EOTF
- Both Peak Brightness and deep black levels of either more than 1000 nits and less than 0.05 nits of black, OR more than 540 nits of peak brightness and less than 0.0005 nits of black level. (This dual contrast standard is likely a direct sop to LG’s OLED technology, which can’t match the high nit levels of LCD/LED displays but can completely outmatch them in terms of how dark their blacks go, thus re-bracketing the range which constitutes HDR and deep contrast.
Note Rec.2020 allows 12 bit color as well and DCI P3 is only 73% of Rec.2020. Yet the new 4K UHD movie standard will adhere to 10 bit DCI P3.
Full list of HDR tvs
http://ca.rtings.com/tv/tests/movies/hdr/wide-color-gamut-rec-709-dci-p3-rec-2020
(Well only the top 2 would qualify for the new standard)







