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According to measurements taken by flatpanelshd, HDR brightness sits around 740 nits when 1%-10% of the screen is aiming for full brightness. The brightness drops with larger areas, going to 395 nits at 25% screen coverage, 217 nits at 50%, and 139 nits at 100%. Rtings reported similar measurements for sustained brightness. For peak brightness, they measured around 800 nits from 2%-10%, 456 nits at 25%, 302 nits at 50%, and 146 nits at 100%. Rtings tested the 55" CX while flatpanelshd tested the 65" model. It's unlikely but possible that the 48" model will perform differently. Remember to check independent reviews for brightness measurements since most manufacturers exaggerate these numbers.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.In response to LG's answer... Wow... Another great example of LG's utterly hopeless support. So you're basically admitting that your customer support and sales process consists of reading only "listed" specs off some sheet somewhere? "Regrettably... not listed..." Really? No kidding. That's why I asked the question. So ok... new question... Someone at LG designed and produced this product. Someone knows its specs beyond what's listed on some piece of paper somewhere. Who is that someone and how do I get in contact with that person in order to ask him/her?
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Regrettably, the brightness specifications (nits or cm2) for the LG CX 48 inch Class 4K Smart OLED TV w/ AI ThinQ® (48.2'' Diag), Model # OLED48CXPUB are not listed for the TV...^IFV
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