Sony x900h television: Difference between revisions

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The Sony X900H (XH90 in Europe) Television is a 4K LCD TV produced by Sony.
The Sony X900H (XH90 in Europe) Television is a 4K LCD TV produced by Sony in 2020.


=Anti-consumer instances=
=Anti-consumer instances=


Sony claims this TV it supports "4K120" feature defined in HDMI2.1 specifications<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20201112194107/https://www.hdmi.org/spec21sub/eightk60_fourk120</ref>, but the feature is not fully supported, at least not exactly how it's defined in the referenced HDMI 2.1 specifications nor how an average person/buyer would expect, which states that ''4K@120Hz enables ultra-fast motion UHD images to be crisp and razor sharp'' and [http://web.archive.org/web/20201106145004im_/https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/hdmi-web-shared/public-web/static-images/1080vs4Kvs8K.jpg this image] from the same source defines the 4K Ultra HD resolution as 3840 vertical pixels and '''2160 horizontal pixels''', which is crucial for this case.
== The 4K120 blur issue ==
Sony advertised this TV in 2020 as supporting "4K120" feature<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20210111215436/https://www.sony.ca/en/electronics/televisions/xbr-x900h-series/specifications</ref> defined in HDMI 2.1 specifications<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20201112194107/https://www.hdmi.org/spec21sub/eightk60_fourk120</ref>, but the feature is still not fully supported, at least not exactly how it is defined in the referenced HDMI 2.1 specifications nor how an average person/buyer would be led to believe. The official specification states that ''4K@120Hz enables ultra-fast motion UHD images to be crisp and razor sharp'' and [http://web.archive.org/web/20201106145004im_/https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/hdmi-web-shared/public-web/static-images/1080vs4Kvs8K.jpg this image] from the same source defines the 4K Ultra HD resolution as 3840 vertical pixels and '''2160 horizontal pixels''', which is crucial for this case.


===The 4K120 blur issue===
Sony started selling the TV with no support for 4K120 feature claiming it will be available via a future firmware update, which it has been. However, their implementation was very deceptive towards the consumers because the effective resolution this TV can display when outputting 4K120 content is 3840 vertical and '''1080 horizontal pixels''' (even though TV is reporting 3840x2160 resolution in this case). A very simple close visual inspection is enough to see the degrade in image quality compared to 4K60, and a thorough pixel count will prove that the image resolution at 4K120 is 3840x1080 stretched vertically to fit the 2160 physical pixels.
 
 
Sony started selling the TV with no support for 4K120 feature claiming they will implement it in the future firmware updates, which they did. However, their implementation was very deceptive towards the consumers because the effective resolution this TV can display when outputting 4K120 content is 3840 vertical and '''1080 horizontal pixels''', even though TV is reporting 3840x2160 resolution in this case. A very simple visual inspection or a thorough pixel counting will prove this reported resolution wrong.


This issue is ultimately manifested as vertical blur, because every 2 vertical pixels are duplicated instead of being unique.
This issue is ultimately manifested as vertical blur, because every 2 vertical pixels are duplicated instead of being unique.




Sony never fixed the blur issue in their X900H TV. It was advertised as supporting 4K120 <ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20210111215436/https://www.sony.ca/en/electronics/televisions/xbr-x900h-series/specifications</ref><ref>https://www.avsforum.com/threads/owners-thread-for-the-sony-x900h-no-price-talk.3125278/page-1819</ref>
Sony never fixed the blur issue in their X900H TV, as evident by the hundreds of people in the relevant topic at AVS forum <ref>https://www.avsforum.com/threads/owners-thread-for-the-sony-x900h-no-price-talk.3125278/page-1819</ref>


Following this they decide to band-aid hoping nobody would notice by applying a sharpening filter as claimed in this article <ref>https://videocardz.com/newz/sony-fixes-4k120hz-blurriness-on-x900h-xh90-tvs-by-applying-a-sharpening-filter</ref>
Following this they decide to band-aid hoping nobody would notice by applying a sharpening filter as claimed in this article <ref>https://videocardz.com/newz/sony-fixes-4k120hz-blurriness-on-x900h-xh90-tvs-by-applying-a-sharpening-filter</ref>