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Introduction
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01.Tour & Design
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02.Blacks & Whites
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03.Color Accuracy
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04.Motion
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05.Viewing Effects
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06.Calibration
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07.Remote Control
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08.Connectivity
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09.Audio & Menus
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10.Formats & Media
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11.Power Consumption
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12.Vs Sharp LC-40E67UN
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13.Vs Sony KDL40S5100
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14.Vs Samsung LN40B650
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15.Conclusion
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16.Series Comparison
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17.Ratings & Specs
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18.Comments
Samsung LN40B610
Previous: Page 3
Color AccuracyNext: Page 5
Viewing Effects
Motion Summary
This is a review of the Samsung LN40B610. The other TVs in this series include the LN46B610 and the LN55B610. Test data should be broadly applicable to all models in the 610 series. Read here for more details on series differences.
• The Auto Motion Plus 120Hz processing does a good job of smoothing motion
• We did see some artifacts, such as trailing and odd glitches
• Testing done using DisplayMate Software
Motion Smoothness (7.13)
We found in our tests that the LN40B610 did a very decent job of rendering motion overall; the Auto Motion Plus 120Hz processing did an excellent job of making motion smoother without loosing all of the detail. There are a number of different levels of this processing, called Clear, Stadnard, Smooth and Custom, We got the best results with the Standard setting, as this probvided the best balance of smoothing while still preserving the detail of the image. Serious users will welcome the Custom mode, which allows you to set your own preferneces for Blur Reduction and Judder Reduction.
Motion Artifacting (6.88)
We did notice a few issues in the motion, though; some dark grey objects had a colored fringe when they moved; a gradual gradient of grey that we used on one of our tests produced a rainbow-like effect that was very disconcerting. It was only very slightly noticeable when watching real world video, though. We also saw a slight fringing effect on some skin tones as well, where objects like faces or bodies moving quickly across the screen were preceded by a slight fringe. Both this and the grey rainbow effect seemed to be more pronounced on objects moving from the left to the right for some reason.
3:2 Pulldown & 24fps (8.0)
The LN40B610 has two levels of 3:2 pulldown processing, which it calls Film Mode. Many broadcasters use a process called an inverse telecine to give their movies and Tv shows a more flim-like look, and the display can use a process called a 3:2 pulldown to detect this and recreate the filmic look. The LN40B610 has three options: Off, and Auto1 and Auto 2 mode. Auto1 was the better mode in our tests: it did a better job of detecting this type of signal and smoothing out the resulting image to eliminate dot crawl and other problems. The display also had no problems detecing and showing a true 24 frames per second signal produced by a high-end Blu-ray player.
| Other Models in the LNXX610 Series |
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| This is a review of the LN40B610, specifically. The other TVs in this series should be broadly similar in terms of performance and usability. For details about any differences, click on the image to jump to the Series Comparison page. | ||||
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| LN46B610 46' |
LN52B610 52' |
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