Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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The Players Championship in 4K
The tournament is being shown in 4K, Channel 1353 on Xfinity. Personally, I cannot see much picture improvement. Can you? I have a 75 inch Sony 4K TV and a 4K cable box.
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#2
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You might be able to check your television settings to see if it actually displaying a 4K picture, I have seen a noticeable difference on some shows on our 4K TV, Hisense brand.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. |
#3
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Thanks, but I am certain that my TV and cable box are both set on 4K. I also understand that there are two ways that a 4K signal is produced. A native 4K signal is produced at the source using special (and very expensive) 4K cameras. But some 4K signals are made using regular cameras and then converted to 4K using a type of upgrade conversion software. I don't know what type of signal is being used for the golf tournament. But, in my opinion, the whole 4K system has not lived up to it's expectations.
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#4
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I can see a very noticeable difference. Colors are more vibrant, picture is sharper, and much easier to follow the golf ball in flight. You should be able to see that easily on a 75" TV.
The ability to see 4K is not limited to the sets ability to receive and display 4K, but also it's ability to render the 4K signal on a screen. Cheaper sets can't render a 4K signal much better than they can a 1080P signal. There are varying levels of picture quality on TV's. Better ones have smaller pixels, better color reproduction, and better black and white levels.. 4K on a $500 75" TV will not be nearly as clear as 4K on $1,500 TV (generally speaking). |
#5
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Some difference, not much.
Some people convince themself of great difference since they spent the money.
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Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
#6
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When considering the limits of visual accuity, there are some rules of thumb regarding set size and viewing distance. For your size set, you probably can’t discern any differences between 1080p and 2160p source material unless you are sitting 10 feet or closer to the set. This assumes, of course, that the material is truly 2160p and is processed correctly all the way to your screen. I typically sit 12 feet from the set and when I have compared 1080p and 2160p material I can’t see a difference. There could, I suppose, be some HDR- type enhancements that provide better colors.
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#7
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Quote:
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#10
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I have a Sony Bravia 4K TV. It upconverts 1080p broadcasts to simulate 4K. When I watch a so-called actual 4k broadcast I can't see any difference.
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#11
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That may be what I am experiencing. But, if a 4K TV upconverts from 1080p to 4K, why do you need an upconverted 4K broadcast? Even the football games that were advertised as 4K admitted that they were using upconversion software instead of producing a genuine native 4K signal.
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#13
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me either, no difference
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Fast Eddie The Villages Firestick Guy |
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