Viewing Angle Technology. To improve viewing angles on VA panel TVs, companies have introduced viewing angle technology, like Samsung's 'Ultra Viewing Angle' and Sony's 'X-Wide Angle'. This improves the viewing angles a bit at the cost of its contrast, but the contrast still isn't as low as IPS panels. Conclusion. The LG C2, TCL’s QLED 4K, and Samsung’s 8K LED TVs offer excellent image quality and measure viewing at wide angles up to 70 degrees. These TVs like TCL’s and Samsung’s with IPS and VA panel technology degrade image quality beyond 40 degrees from the front of the screen, causing the image to look darker. Panel manufacturer BOE has had ADS LCD panels in a few TVs so far. This is probably where LCD based panels are going in the short term future while the tech you mentioned matures and comes down in price. It will be interesting if BOE decides to cut panels at monitor sizes, especially for ultrawide. You are absolutely right on VA panels though. The Samsung The Frame TV is a good TV overall. It's well-suited for watching TV shows and sports due to its high peak brightness and decent reflection handling. It has a great response time, 120Hz refresh rate, low input lag, and VRR support, making it a good option for gaming and use as a PC monitor. VA panels excel in contrast, which is often considered the most important factor in image quality. VA monitors commonly have contrasts of 3,000:1, while a typical IPS comes in at 1,000:1. IPS If you're talking about VA panels in the monitor space (so not TVs which have much higher quality VA panels), color reproduction is typically a good bit worse than a comparably priced IPS panel. Also while VA panels don't have IPS type glow that is inherent to IPS panel tech, they do have VA glow- a result of extremely harsh viewing angles. So i can say that chg70 can produce accurate colors(not %100). CHG70 contrast is bad for a va panel but my other va monitor z271 has good contrast. Ips offers accurate colors, better viewing angles and color consistency, not better colors. CHG70 has best colors in the market. Its quantum dot va panel. My CHG70 has %137 sRGB %97 DCI P3 gamut volume.

The LG is a premium TV with an OLED panel and infinite contrast ratio for perfect black levels. It also has much wider viewing angles, more gaming features like HDMI 2.1 and VRR support, and it displays a wide color gamut for HDR content. The Samsung is an entry-level TV with an LED panel, and it doesn't have the burn-in risk like the LG.

The Q70C QLED TV has a 120Hz panel that delivers good motion clarity. The TV uses a 120Hz black frame insert that cannot be turned off. As a result, moving objects sometimes have a distinct double border. The motion interpolation is very good. In this model, Samsung uses a VA panel , but without local dimming.

IPS TVs are honestly even worse than VA TVs because the glow is very severe on large panels and it is basically determinant to viewing angles as well. This doesn't show up in reviews but in real world use, it is pretty awful on a TV if you watch a movie that is somewhat dark. Never buy a IPS TV imo, even for monitor use they are no good. VA has from 1700:1 to 5000:1 depending on the monitor. Most gaming IPS monitors have 1150:1 contrast ratio and I think it would be enough. AOC 24G2 has 1450:1. Just avoid Nano-IPS. It has way oversaturated colors and a lower contrast ratio of 800:1 which is worse than some TNs. r/Monitors. Brands like Samsung betting on TVs VA and IPS panels LG brand, it incorporates more difference than mentioned here as the type of 3D. Panasonic or Sony are brands that offer models with both technologies. We generally recommend VA panels. Naim atom, kef ls50, custom design stand. Shure se425, Oppo ha-2. Oled 55FZ802. For a TV though, VA panels can have very good colour reproduction, and again what I think is more important for a TV is the much better contrast they offer compared to IPS. If you're buying a large TV and need wide viewing angles I still wouldn't buy IPS in this day and age, I'd just go OLED provided burn-in is not a concern with your use. OLED I've ruled out TN due to color inaccuracy, and am now trying to figure out if IPS or VA screens would be better. IPS, from what I've heard, would be better for viewing angles, and VA is better for movies because of the contrast (and therefore how true the black is). My question, then, is how negligible is the difference in viewing angles, and
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  • is va panel good for tv