The arrival of high dynamic range (HDR)
picture technology has really shaken up the industry. While most would
agree that HDR's expanded brightness range has a brilliant impact on
picture quality, the technology is also proving tough for TVs to get
right.
Cue the Samsung UE65KS9500, which on paper at least looks
better equipped than any TV before to unlock HDR's full potential.
Particularly promising is a colossal maximum brightness of around 1400
nits that's more than twice bright as LG's latest OLED TVs.
If
winning in lighting isn't enough, Samsung's set also uses Quantum Dot
technology to deliver comfortably more than 90% of the so-called DCI-P3
digital cinema colour range that's become the current target for today's
high dynamic range displays.
The
UE65KS9500 does its best, too, to deliver more accurate backlighting
than most LCD TVs by using an array of lights placed directly behind the
screen and controlled by a local dimming system that can output
independent levels of brightness from different light clusters.
Samsung's flagship set is on a mission to dethrone LG's OLED G6 as this year's best TV.
Design
The
KS9500 is a seriously attractive TV. Its silver frame is exceptionally
slim and suitably shiny, and its dashing brushed aluminium 'boomerang'
stand is a work of art.
If there's one thing about the
UE65KS9500's design that some people won't like, though, it will be its
curved screen. Curved screens have been dividing TV lovers since Samsung
introduced them in 2014, and for all its stylish touches the UE65KS9500
is unlikely to sway the curved screen naysayers.
Where the curved
screen might be a problem is if you're thinking of hanging a KS9500 on
your wall – the curve leads to a fairly hefty screen depth of 115.9mm
(to go with an off-stand height of 833mm and width of 1441.6mm).
At
least you won't need to reach behind the set to plug in your cable box
or various HDMI cables. The UE65KS9500's connections are all placed on
an external connections box, meaning you only need a single cable
running into your TV. The most important sockets on the connections box
are four HDMIs – all capable of receiving Ultra HD HDR images at up to 60 frames a second – and a trio of USBs for multimedia playback.
The
TV also supports wired or Wi-Fi network connection to DLNA devices or
Samsung's online services, as well as Bluetooth hook up to your mobile
devices. Design TL;DR: It's sleek and futuristic but its curved screen won't be to everyone's tastes. Screen sizes available: 65 and 75 inches | 4K: Yes | HDR: Yes | Panel technology: VA-type LCD | Smart TV: Yes, Samsung Tizen | Curved: Yes | Dimensions: 1441.6 x 833 x 115.9mm (W x H x D) | 3D: No | Inputs: 4 x HDMI with HDCP 2.2, 3 x USB 2.0, component, composite, Ethernet, optical audio, Wi-Fi
Smart TV (Tizen)
While
Samsung has always done well with the sheer amount of content available
on its smart TV platform, its smart TV interface has not traditionally
been the easiest to use.
The second-generation Tizen platform used here, though, tries hard to put this right.
One
significant change is the addition of a second contextual row of icons
that changes depending on the icon you've selected from the lower deck.
This makes navigating through all the UE65KS9500's myriad content
options much more intuitive and speedy.
All
your other downloaded apps or Samsung's app 'store' can be accessed via
a simple selectable box on the left of the home screen, and as ever the
sheer number of apps available for is extensive.
The UE65KS9500's
apps are headlined by 4K and HDR versions of Amazon and Netflix, and
we're assured by Samsung that all of the 'big four' terrestrial
broadcasters will have their catch up services available at some point,
even though at the time of writing neither All4 or Demand 5 were
available. It would be good, though, if Samsung followed Sony, Panasonic
and LG in offering built-in Freetime, Freeview Play or YouView support. Smart TV TL;DR:Samsung's 2nd-gen Tizen interface makes the UE65KS9500's smart features much easier to use, and content options are expansive.
HD/SDR Performance
As
with many of the best high dynamic range-capable TVs this year, the
UE65KS9500 is outstandingly good at showing us the standard dynamic
range content most of us still watch the majority of the time. The
backlight system Samsung's developed for handling the much more extreme
demands of HDR copes effortlessly with SDR, combining gorgeously deep
black colours with punchy whites within a single frame and producing an
immaculately dynamic but also balanced and natural colour range.
Best
of all, considering we're talking about an LCD TV, dark standard
dynamic range shots enjoy superbly uniform backlighting, with next to no
clouding flaws even with the most contrast-rich sources, and no
'torchlight' effects in the picture's corners.
The
only time you might see some backlight 'halos' around very bright
objects – a common phenomenon with direct LED TVs – is if you're
watching from an angle of more than 30 degrees down the screen's sides.
When
it comes to upscaling the HD sources that still dominate our viewing
time, the KS9500 is outstanding. Samsung's UHD upscaling engine has long
been renowned for being peerless at making HD sources look sharper and
more detailed, and if anything the KS9500 takes this prowess to a new
level by adding more colour precision to the upscaling process, and
removing more source noise. HD/SDR Performance TL;DR:It's hard to see how an LCD TV could make today's HD and SDR sources look any better.
4K/HDR Performance
Being
able to hit brightness peaks of 1400 lumens lets the UE65KS9500 deliver
the bright end of HDR's expanded light range in spades – and it's truly
a sight to behold.
For instance, while watching Ultra HD Blu-ray
images from the likes of The Revenant and Exodus: Gods & Kings,
shots of skies, sunlight and reflections look unprecedentedly bright and
dynamic, which makes the action feel much more intense, immersive and,
in The Revenant's case, lifelike.
It's not just with bright shots
that the UE65KS9500 excels, though. It also combines its intense bright
peaks in the same frame as startlingly deep black colours by LCD
standards – yet both extremes always feel balanced and natural.
The
UE65KS9500 isn't just about HDR's extremes, though. It also does a
better job than any rival TV of expressing all the little light and
shade subtleties in both dark and bright areas that HDR introduces. This
is especially true in the brightest areas, where even LG's mighty OLED
TVs struggle.
Put this groundbreaking dynamism with its
exceptionally crisp UHD sharpness and stunningly rich, bold and
expressive colours that do emphatic justice to the wide colour gamut
technology sported by pretty much all HDR content we're seeing, and the
UE65KS9500 really does deliver the all-round most next-generation
picture I've seen to date.
While the UE65KS9500 is at its
tub-thumping best with native HDR content, it also carries a new HDR+
technology for converting standard dynamic range sources to HDR that's
much more successful than similar systems from other brands – especially
because it manages to genuinely expand the colour palette of SDR
material rather than only injecting more brightness. Purists will still
prefer to leave HDR+ turned off, but it will be a hit with people keen
to make use of their TV's extreme capabilities as often as possible.
Now
for the bad news. Starting with the fact that getting as much
brightness from LCD technology as the UE65KS9500 does inevitably leads
to some unwanted light 'spillage' when watching HDR. In the UE65KS9500's
case, these light flaws appear as halos or 'blooms' of light around
very bright picture areas like torchlight or candles when they appear
against a black backdrop.
Another
niggle is that the UE65KS9500 suffers with quite noticeable colour
striping when dealing with HDR feeds from Ultra HD Blu-ray. Fortunately
you can greatly reduce (but not remove) this issue by pushing the TV's
dynamic contrast option higher than the default position adopted by the
TV's most accurate Movie preset. But this isn't an ideal solution for
image purists who want to see HDR exactly 'as the director intended'.
Other
rare issues are subtle light 'jets' coming in from the TV's corners
during extremely high contrast content, occasional judder with camera
pans, and a peculiar flickering effect when a picture contains large
areas of unusually fine textural detail. 4K/HDR Performance TL;DR:Much
of the time the UE65KS9500 delivers amazing UHD and HDR performance –
though there's a trade-off in the form of occasional backlight issues.
Sound
Despite
its narrow frame and lack of any visible speakers, the UE65KS9500
sounds really good. The soundstage spreads far beyond the TV's physical
borders in every direction without losing cohesion; there's enough bass
on hand to deliver everything from deep male voices to explosions and
the engines of vast alien space ships with surprising conviction; and
the set can inject lots of treble detail without it sounding horribly
harsh.
The mid-range in which most soundtrack action takes place
is open and wide enough to avoid that flat feeling with action scenes
that defines so many of today's TVs, and the speakers are robust enough
not to fall prey to crackling or 'popping' distortions.
So
impressive is the UE65KS9500's sound, in fact, that it gives the sound
bars built into LG's G6 and E6 OLED TVs a run for their money. Sound quality TL;DR:The UE65KS9500 has the power and range to partner its huge, movie-friendly visuals with suitably cinematic sound.
Other panels to ponder…
The main competitors for the UE65KS9500 are LG's 2016 E6 and G6 OLED TVs, plus the Panasonic TX-65DX902.
Where the OLED models are concerned, the way each pixel in an OLED
screen produces its own light gives them a key edge when it comes to
showing bright HDR elements against dark backgrounds in that there's no
unwanted light bleed.
The latest OLED TVs also deliver the dark
end of HDR's expanded brightness spectrum fantastically well, and are
the best TVs in the world with standard dynamic range content. However,
they're much less bright than the Samsung UE65KS9500, leaving them
relatively lacking in impact and detail with bright HDR content.
Looking at Samsung's own range, you can save some cash if you look down to Samsung's KS9000 series.
These aren't quite as bright as the UE65KS9500 and as they use edge LED
rather than direct LED lighting there can be larger backlight issues.
But the KS9000 pictures are still likably aggressive in their delivery
of HDR. Samsung's KS8000 series is also proving popular with consumers,
combining as they do a much more affordable price with still-strong HDR
picture performance and a flat rather than curved screen.
Verdict
The
UE65KS9500 produces hands down the most dramatic demonstration of what
new high dynamic range technology is capable of. Its brightness in
particular is unprecedented, which helps it deliver a much fuller sense
of HDR's expanded light range and colour capabilities than any other
screen I've seen.
The screen features that help it excel with HDR
also make the UE65KS9500 gorgeous to behold with standard dynamic range
sources, and it even sounds fantastic despite having no visible
speakers.
There is a price to pay for the UE65KS9500's
groundbreaking brightness capabilities, though, in the shape of some
occasionally distracting backlight 'blooming' issues with high dynamic
range content.
What this all adds up to is a straight choice
between LG's E6 or G6 OLED TVs and the Samsung UE65KS9500. The OLED
screens deliver superior black levels, avoid backlight bleed issues and
excel with standard dynamic range content, but the UE65KS9500 delivers
more punch, dynamism and detail with HDR.
Try and get eyes on with
both models if you can to see which suits your tastes more – though I
would say that when it's firing on all cylinders with content that shows
it off to its best advantage, the UE65KS9500 really does look like the
future of television arrived early.
Samsung UE65KS9500 review
Reviewed by Unknown
on
13:54:00
Rating: 5
Aucun commentaire