Samsung QN65Q90T LCD Ultra HDTV Review Test Bench

Test Bench

For picture settings used in the viewing, go to www.soundandvision.com. The measurements here were made using CalMAN software from Portrait Displays (www.portrait.com) together with Photo Research PR-650 and Klein K-10A color meters and a Fresco Six-G test pattern generator from Murideo/AVPro.

1220sams.precal

Pre calibration

1220sams.postcal

Post calibration

HD/SDR

Full-On/Full-Off Contrast Ratio: unmeasurable

With its Contrast control at 30 in the Movie picture mode and Local Dimming on Standard (the default), the Q90T's measured peak white level on a 10% full white window was 151 nits (44 foot-lamberts) after calibration. A full black screen was unmeasurable, rendering the Full-On/Full-Off Contrast Ratio unmeasurable. This is clearly due to local diming shutting off the backlight with a full black image (the local dimming can't be turned off—not that you'd want to in normal use).

In the Warm2 Color Tone, the pre-calibration grayscale Delta E, from 20% to 100%, was under 3.37 at or under 70% and a maximum of 4.87 at 90%. The maximum color Delta E was 1.95 (red) before calibration. After calibration, the grayscale Delta E remained at or below 1.0 across the board and the color Delta Es were all under 1.84 (blue). In the BT.1886 setting of the Gamma control, the gamma curve followed the BT.1886 standard without visible deviation.

(Delta E is a figure of merit indicating how close the color comes to the D65 HD standard at each point in the brightness range. Values below 3—some experts allow for 4—are generally considered visually indistinguishable from ideal.)

The Q90T's input lag (1080p) measured 81.8ms in Movie mode and 13.8ms in Game mode with Game Motion Plus On, and 8.8ms with Game Motion Plus Off.

Ultra HD/HDR

Full On/Full Off Contrast Ratio: Unmeasurable

While the Q90T's default Contrast setting was 50, at that level the EOTF (gamma) curve produced excessive luminance on the bright end of the curve. Lowering the Contrast control to 42 for both the before and after readings produced a highly accurate EOTF curve, so that setting was used for calibration.

Post-calibration with the Brightness set to 50 (default), Contrast at 42, Gamma at BT.2084, Local Dimming at Standard, the measured peak level on a 10% white window was 1,293 nits at 100% (94.4 nits at 50%), and the black level 0.000 nits—again, for an unmeasurable full-on/full-off contrast ratio.

With the Warm2 Color temperature and the above basic settings selected, the pre-calibration grayscale Delta E hit a maximum of 10.5 (at 70%) and the color Delta E 7.3 (average 4.6). Post-calibration, the grayscale Delta E never exceeded 3.0 with luminance included (average 0.9), and 3.8 without luminance (average also 0.9). The post-calibration color Delta E never exceeded 2.4 (in blue). A color checker analysis, which measures the accuracy of dozens of different colors, resulted in an average Delta E of 1.91 with luminance included and 1.67 without.

As above, the post calibration peak white level measured just under 1,300 nits with a 10% white window, 900 nits with a 50% window, 900 nits with a 50% window, and 600 nits with full-screen white (100%).

Both color saturation and tracking were good for P3 within a BT.2020 color space, and very good in BT.709 within the same BT.2020 space. The Q90T reached 73.6% of BT.2020 and 92.7% of P3 (using the 1976 standard for both).

The Samsung passed our 3:2 and 2:2 de-interlacing and upconversion tests. Few high-quality modern sources are interlaced, but this might be a benefit if you have a large collection of DVDs (though there are other options, such as a Blu-ray player or A/V receiver's own built-in deinterlacing).

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COMMENTS
3ddavey13's picture

The only benefit this TV provides over last year's model is price. The number of local dimming zones (ldz) needs to be increased on LED/LCD sets, not decreased. No wonder these sets are cheaper than last year. My next criticism is aimed at almost every TV manufacturer. Why has there been virtually no improvement in P3 coverage? Sets have been hovering in the low to mid 90% range for the last 4-5 years. Together with # of ldz and HDMI 2.1 this is (imo) a major factor for not purchasing a current 8K LCD set. I also want to call Samsung out for creating HDR10+. It's not like there was a performance issue with Dolby Vision that needed addressing, and now Samsung owners are denied access to the far more popular DV. Plus Samsung must have known HDR10+ would never be supported by companies like Sony and LG. It creates a totally unnecessary format war which no consumer needs.

katherinerose6's picture

The most well-liked streaming websites are accessible with Samsung's Tizen Smart TV function. At first, I thought it was a little clumsy and too sensitive; on multiple occasions arborist wellington, a simple touch on the otherwise excellent but non-backlit remote control accidentally took me in an unwanted direction.

katherinerose6's picture

The most well-liked streaming websites are accessible with Samsung's Tizen Smart TV function. At first, I thought it was a little clumsy and too sensitive; on multiple occasions arborist wellington, a simple touch on the otherwise excellent but non-backlit remote control accidentally took me in an unwanted direction.

gejafe3470's picture

While it lacks Dolby Vision support and shows some visible "blooming," the overall value is noteworthy, especially considering its $1,900 price tag. - top drywall contractor in baltimore

proba's picture

The only benefit this TV provides over last year's model is price. The number of local dimming zones (ldz) needs to be increased on LED/LCD sets, not decreased. No wonder these sets are cheaper than last year. My next criticism is aimed at almost every TV manufacturer. Why has there been virtually no improvement in P3 coverage? Sets have been hovering in the low to mid 90% range for the last 4-5 years. {Bunkering}

fiume001's picture

I also want to call Samsung out for creating HDR10+. It's not like there was a performance issue with Dolby Vision that needed addressing, and now Samsung owners are denied access to the far more popular DV. Plus Samsung in the MobiRi Store must have known HDR10+ would never be supported by companies like Sony and LG.

joedavidson's picture

The 65-inch Q90T series model from Samsung is a great option for those seeking high-quality performance in a 4K TV in a finish basement without breaking the bank. This model offers impressive overall performance, which makes it stand out among Samsung's previous flagship 4K TVs, and it comes at a more affordable price.

Jen Jennifer69's picture

You have a lot of good reviews, gonna check this out soon. commercial real estate cincinnati

Jen Jennifer69's picture

Glad to visit this again! Keep on posting.
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Jen Jennifer69's picture

I can say that this is amazing!
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