11/12/2021 08:25Careful, there are a group of people who cannot accept that the TV has …Careful, there are a group of people who cannot accept that the TV has judder issues with slow moving shots.. boy its awful isn't it. They have been attacking me relentlessly, suggesting I am the only one who sees it and that my TV set is broken, when its a known issue. Reporting every single post I make. Brightness for me, I find the CX bright enough for normal viewing, I don't use it anywhere near as bright as it can go, not great for HDR though I guess.Well done for sending yours back. I am enjoying playing PC games on my CX, that's the only reason I didn't return mine.. apart from the effort, embarrassment (explaining to my partner why our near £900 Tv needs to go back) and maybe not being able to find a suitable replacement now most of the deals have passed.
This judder affects all oled tvs. It’s due to the near instant pixel refresh time on oled panels. It’s most noticeable on film & tv content content filmed at 24fps. You just don’t see it at the cinema where the image is projected or so much on lcd panels which have much slower pixel refresh times (blur).
Oled manufacturers can reduce the effect with motion processing - but it can be difficult to preserve the look of film content without introducing the dreaded soap opera effect. I believe LG added a more natural “cinema” motion setting on the C1.
The odd thing is that only some people notice or are bothered by this native “judder”. If you’re one of those people buy an oled with good or “natural” motion processing (current LGs or Sony, Panasonic) or don’t go for an oled (edited)