1-4 of 4 Answers
These are different issues, as the resolution doesn't have anything to do with HDR. The set does upscale standard and HD content to be more sharp, with the set estimating gaps between pixels in lower definition images, which works fairly well. Occasionally you can notice some hazing at sharp contrast lines in the images. Very minor though. The HDR for the TV is a read and display HDR, so if playing content that is designed to display in HDR, it will. It will not upscale images to HDR though. HDR is a post processing image quality where the photo, displayed in 4k, is shown with exaggerated contrasts, by selecting the detail rich areas of bright and dark sections of the image, and exaggerating these details so they aren't washed out by the exposures. More expensive sets will use different exposures of the TV stream to "upscale" content not shown with HDR programmed in.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It does have HDR but only when it's needed. You'll see a small icon that says hdr when it's being used
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes it does have HDR but High Dynamic Resolution (provides information about brightness and color across a much wider range. HDR-capable displays can read that information and show an image built from a wider gamut of color and brightness) is not the same as upscaling up full HD to 4K (Upscaling converts low resolution material into a higher definition)
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Took me a while on the LG website to find it, but the 55UH6030 is not an HDR set. The HDR version of this is the 55UH6150. That's literally the one and only difference between the two, but I guess it's a big one. Here's what Consumer Reports has to say about all of the HDR hubbub: http://www.consumerreports.org/lcd-led-oled-tvs/what-is-an-hdr-tv-and-should-i-get-one/
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
