![]() ![]() Ideally, you should be sat almost directly on to the U7QF to get the best image quality on offer from this TV. Viewing angles are not a strong point on the Hisense and as soon as you get over 20 degrees off-axis colour and gamma start to drift noticeably. We also encountered signs of blooming when bright objects appeared on screen with a darker background, such as subtitles and this was most noticeable with HDR content. However, when viewing within a normal living room with ambient lighting it was less noticeable. We didn’t notice banding within any other content.īlack bars within HDR 2.40:1 movies, for the most part, did remain black but light bleed was also seen with bright objects close to the bars and could be distracting when watching in a dark room. This is once again a limitation of the technology and is mild on the Hisense, but we have to mention it for completeness. We did encounter some very mild DSE (Dirty Screen Effect) on occasions and some banding when the image panned across a single colour background, such as with some shots in live football games. These issues were not visible with the vast majority of viewing materials in normal use. We found panel uniformity to be decent with some darker corners and outer edges and a slightly brighter centre when showing a 100% brightness field and a darker centre and lighter edges on a 5% field. HISENSE SMART TV QVIEW MODEL FULLThe Hisense U7QF is a 55-inch LED LCD TV which uses a Full Array Local Dimming (FALD) backlight with 72 separate zones. But overall, for normal living room duties, it has a decent enough speaker set up and of course, you can add a more powerful off-board multi-channel system at any time. Bass performance was lacking as you would expect and there is no easy way to add an external subwoofer to the TV. In day to day use, we didn't have any issues with the sound system performance with voices sounding clear and distinguishable, with a good stereo soundstage to either side of the set. It also supports Dolby Atmos, with internal decoding built-in and an immersive experience created through the application of psychoacoustic processing. The U7 has an audio system based on stereo speakers and 20W of amplification. We will cover this in more detail in the performance area of the review. This means that the U7QF should be able to handle any currently available HDR format used in broadcast, streaming or disc formats. It supports wide colour gamut (DCI-P3/Rec.2020) and high dynamic range (HDR10, HLG - Hybrid Log-Gamma - HDR10+ and Dolby Vision). Hisense claims that the FALD lit U7QF has a peak brightness of 600 nits for HDR playback. ![]() It offers support for a number of streaming services, including YouTube, Netflix and Amazon Prime. ![]() Hisense uses its own VIDAA U 4.0 smart platform which, while relatively simple, is clean, intuitive and responsive. ![]()
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