Despite the 120Hz panel, it can't display any 120Hz signal. We didn’t observe any distracting flashlighting into letter boxed borders.The Hisense 65H9F is a decent gaming display. These include: 4 HDMI 2.0a inputs with HDCP 2.2 copy protection, 2 USB ports, an optical digital audio output, Ethernet (LAN) port, coaxial antenna/cable input, a set of analog composite AV inputs and a headphone jack. The contrast ratio is excellent, and it can display a wide color gamut.

It can has a great wide color gamut, and it can play 24p content without judder.The H9F is an excellent TV for HDR gaming. The H9F mainly competes with similar budget models, including the TCL 6 Series/R617 2018, Overall, the Hisense H9F has a good design. You will receive a verification email shortly.There was a problem. However, the thin border around the screen is typical today, with a slightly wider bottom frame, none of which should prove to be a distraction. These zones of LED lights can be individually dimmed and brightened as required by the picture, even allowing a zone to be turned off completely to produce deep blacks. Like some LG TVs, including the This TV is extremely thin.

The color temperature is a bit warm.After calibration, most of the issues are corrected. We want to review that one, though so far it’s only been seen at trade shows. Motion Interpolation (30 fps)

After HDR calibration we were able to boost that coverage to more than 97% of DCI-P3.Colors were similarly excellent in standard dynamic range (SDR) measuring for the BT.709 color space.The Hisense 65H9F uses a 120 Hz native refresh rate panel, which generally does a good job on its own handling motion blur and judder. For 60p sources, the This TV has a native 120Hz panel, but it doesn't support any variable refresh rate technologies, like FreeSync.The Hisense 65H9F has outstanding low input lag with any input signal, as long as 'Game' mode is used. White balance is almost perfect, but pure white is still inaccurate. The Hisense H9F is a solid competitor in the 65-inch 4K TV category with respectable picture performance and a difficult-to-resist price.The Hisense H9F delivers many of the features people should be looking for in an inexpensive 4K TV. Even the nuances in relatively monochromatic scenes — such as a dead, white tree set against a foggy, gray background — were faithfully rendered.In Arrival, another 4K disc, colors looked natural, as well. More-dramatic scenes did just as well, such as the nighttime liftoff of a helicopter during which we could see all the details, including a compact car sitting nearby in the shadows.Contrast and black levels also came to the fore in viewing The Martian in 4K with HDR. Black and sharp details are not.Note that Hisense is developing a method of stacking two LCD layers, using the one in back as the filter for the actual backlighting, cutting down on light bleed tremendously. HD GURU is It has outstanding low input lag, for a responsive experience, and it has an excellent response time, so there is very little blur. VLC—which I use at home in place of DLNA when possible—comes to mind. While there is a significant difference in pixels between the two models – typically 1920 x 1080p for HD TVs compared to 3840 x 2160p for UHD 4K options, the picture quality of HD TVs is still good, with many customers commenting on the vibrant colors and crisp images. With this TV, the image appears washed out when viewed even slightly off-angle, as the black levels rise very quickly. This isn’t quite as effective as a self-emissive display, like a much pricier OLED TV, that allows turning off light at the pixel level for pure blacks, but it isn’t far off, and LED backlighting allows the panel to get quite bright (just shy of UHDA premimum-level 1,000 nits peak luminance by our measurements) to produce radiant specular highlights that add a 3D quality to the images.The H9F isn’t perfect.
* You will receive the latest news and updates on your favorite celebrities!Greg Tarr is HD Guru.com managing editor specializing in hard news and feature reporting from the consumer electronics industry. It has only decent black uniformity, though, and blooming can be an issue in dark scenes.