Does X2 has black crush issue - OPPO Find X2 Questions & Answers

i am contemplating between oneplus 8 pro and x2, does x2 has display issues like 8 pro?
black crush , etc?

No. I too moved away from the OnePlus 8 Pro after replacing 3 OnePlus 8 Pro devices with various issues such as Black Crush and display uniformity. I eventually opted for a refund and got the Oppo Find X2. The display on my Find X2 is very uniform and there seems no visible black crush except when the brightness is at it's lowest. At the lowest brightness, the colors seem very washed out. This is very definitely a software issue I assume.

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Image retention aka ghosting redmi note 5

So I got my brand new Xiaomi redmi note 5 global, I noticed ghosting after 5 min reading on some app and switch to another app.
Display panel is tiamma, what a shame same problems with the tiamma panel on the note 4.
Jdi panel on note 4 no problems with ghosting at all.
How to test it let it for like 5 a 10 min on the same app and go to a darker app.
It is a shame that such low quality panels are used again., Mi mix 2 does also have severe problems with image response time.
Edit I noticed more people are complaining about ghosting on the redmi note 5.
I'm pretty sure, most of the note 5's use tiamma panels, if not all of em, image retention hasn't been an issue on mine, I've read you can adjust the color temperatures to a cooler setting, an some other small things that fixes the problem, for the money, I think the display looks pretty great, I came from an iPhone 7 Plus costing 700+ with uneven lighting/yellowing of the display.

Screen ghosting/image retention

Anyone else seeing or facing issues of image retention/screen ghosting (I don't know what it's exactly called) on redmi note 5 pro? I noticed it for the first time on grey backgrounds. I guess I've had this device for about 4-5 months now.
no issue here
I am, too, experiencing a lot of screen retention, even on low brightness and reading mode on on my Redmi Note 5 AI. Mostly noticable on gray or dark colored backgrounds. They do disappear after a few minutes.
My friend who also has a RN5AI with the same display panel but a lower TP version (0x16 as opposed to my 0x22 in the CIT test menu) experiences no screen retention whatsoever, and his display is actually generally cooler in color on the same settings.
xezrunner said:
I am, too, experiencing a lot of screen retention, even on low brightness and reading mode on on my Redmi Note 5 AI. Mostly noticable on gray or dark colored backgrounds. They do disappear after a few minutes.
My friend who also has a RN5AI with the same display panel but a lower TP version (0x16 as opposed to my 0x22 in the CIT test menu) experiences no screen retention whatsoever, and his display is actually generally cooler in color on the same settings.
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Click to collapse
Okay, so I have a tianma 0x22 panel on my RN5P as well, and the screen retention is only visible on grey or dark backgrounds, I'm thinking of sending the phone in for a display replacement soon. But
xezrunner said:
I am, too, experiencing a lot of screen retention, even on low brightness and reading mode on on my Redmi Note 5 AI. Mostly noticable on gray or dark colored backgrounds. They do disappear after a few minutes.
My friend who also has a RN5AI with the same display panel but a lower TP version (0x16 as opposed to my 0x22 in the CIT test menu) experiences no screen retention whatsoever, and his display is actually generally cooler in color on the same settings.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm on 0x22 version too, but I not face any image retention since I bought it 3 months ago.

Question How is touch latency on 60hz ?

I bought the op 8 pro at a discount but returned it because the screen had insane levels of black crush and 60hz was giving me touch latency even a bit higher than what you get on some 300$ phones which was very annoying, it's not like I can design the apps myself to force them to stay at 120hz with no glitches.
How does the 9 pro touch latency at 60hz compare to older oneplus phones like the 8 pro? Haven't found complaints as can easily be found with the 8 pro 7 pro and so on, but also haven't seen anybody ask about it so I thought I should as I can only get to try the phone by buying it and I wanna avoid returning yet another phone.
Why not run it on 120Hz?

Question Force Wide Color Gamut

Not sure how many people are aware of this, but smartphones that can do this - the screen looks absolutely jaw-dropping and stunning. The beautiful, vibrant, and HDR like effect , is very pleasing. It's night and day difference to even DCI - P3, let alone the sh1itty sRGB you're getting on Natural mode, on this device. Those yellow washed out colors...
This is what made me fall in love with my OnePlus 9 Pro. The screen looks absolutely incredible when wide color gamut mode is selected, in display settings.
Of course - with the Pixel 6 Pro, there's no such setting visible. In fact, there's not even white point settings. This has me completely bewildered and a bit annoyed, as to why they would implement something so limited.
On past iterations of Android there was an app called 'Oreo Colorizer', that could force wide color gamut everywhere. But it doesn't seem to be working on the 6 Pro.
Does anyone know of ANY way to force W.CG on the 6P? This is so crucial, I'll offer a bounty.
Custom kernels offer KCal support which are a boon for users who love a certain look on their OLED displays, albeit requiring Qualcomm drivers.
The Pixel 6 Pro display covers 73.8% of the DCI-P3 color gamut in the natural setting and if you prefer more saturation you can use Boosted Color
Letting our lab tests weigh in on the matter, in our colorimeter results, the Pixel 6 Pro covers 74% of the DCI-P3 color gamut in its Natural color setting. The iPhone 13 Pro comes out ahead at 82.5%. While that tips in favor of the iPhone, if you like a more colorful look, the Pixel 6 Pro can turn things up with its Boosted color setting that likely pushes it to roughly double the Natural setting.
Brightness is less contentious; the iPhone 13 Pro delivered 1,024 nits of brightness, making it the brightest mobile display that we’ve ever tested. The Pixel 6 Pro hits an impressive 842 nits, but it’s not enough to keep up with the iPhone 13 Pro. Both will be perfectly visible in even bright sunlight, but Apple wins.
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Pixel 6 Pro vs. iPhone 13 Pro: Which phone is best?
Pixel 6 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro are two of the best phones out there, and our guide will help you find the best for you!
www.laptopmag.com

General Screen lottery woes (and a protip)

I ended up getting three pixel 6's and a 6 pro, because i'm picky about screens.
- The screen lottery is still real.
- All three pixel 6's have different Mura Effect. None of them have no Mura Effect. Many people don't notice this until it's pointed out to them, but with normal vision it's obvious on dark colors with a dim screen in a dark room (i.e. everyone's phone in bed every night).
- The 6's have a grayer graypoint than the 6 pro. The 6 pro's graypoint is slightly green.
- The regular 0%-100% brightness is relatively similar between the 6's and the 6 pro.
- The high brightness mode on all pixel 6's is brighter than the pro.
I'm torn between having a bright display (pixel 6) and a uniform display (pixel 6 pro). I think I'll opt for the uniform display, and for yet another year suffer for the notoriously dim pixel displays.
But for all the **** the pixel 6 display gets for not being "modern", it's literally a better display IMO except for the uniformity problems.
- it's flat, seriously **** curved edges for a plethora of reasons
- it's smaller, far from small but not quite unweildy
- brighter
- more neutral whites and grays
PIXEL DISPLAY PROTIP:
The default display mode, Adaptive, crushes blacks on the dimmest brightness levels. Switch to Boosted, which has the exact same saturation, but doesn't crush blacks! This makes it so that details in the darker parts of media is not crushed to black when you're watching stuff in bed. Use this this image to check it out. Edit the image to blacken out the white square, and then open it in a gallery app (some browsers change how colors appear, e.g. dark mode in the samsung browser darkens images, so don't do any real image-based tests in browsers), and then switch between Adaptive and Boosted. You're welcome .
finshan said:
I ended up getting three pixel 6's and a 6 pro, because i'm picky about screens.
- The screen lottery is still real.
- All three pixel 6's have different Mura Effect. None of them have no Mura Effect. Many people don't notice this until it's pointed out to them, but with normal vision it's obvious on dark colors with a dim screen in a dark room (i.e. everyone's phone in bed every night).
- The 6's have a grayer graypoint than the 6 pro. The 6 pro's graypoint is slightly green.
- The regular 0%-100% brightness is relatively similar between the 6's and the 6 pro.
- The high brightness mode on all pixel 6's is brighter than the pro.
I'm torn between having a bright display (pixel 6) and a uniform display (pixel 6 pro). I think I'll opt for the uniform display, and for yet another year suffer for the notoriously dim pixel displays.
But for all the **** the pixel 6 display gets for not being "modern", it's literally a better display IMO except for the uniformity problems.
- it's flat, seriously **** curved edges for a plethora of reasons
- it's smaller, far from small but not quite unweildy
- brighter
- more neutral whites and grays
PIXEL DISPLAY PROTIP:
The default display mode, Adaptive, crushes blacks on the dimmest brightness levels. Switch to Boosted, which has the exact same saturation, but doesn't crush blacks! This makes it so that details in the darker parts of media is not crushed to black when you're watching stuff in bed. Use this this image to check it out. Edit the image to blacken out the white square, and then open it in a gallery app (some browsers change how colors appear, e.g. dark mode in the samsung browser darkens images, so don't do any real image-based tests in browsers), and then switch between Adaptive and Boosted. You're welcome .
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks for the tip
also dxomark puts the pro more colour accurate than the 6
that and the off angle green/pink hues the none pro get are pretty well known now
If you're rooted and flash a kernel you can enable HBM (high brightness mode) and then the screen is even brighter than an S21 Ultra or any other device.
Izy said:
thanks for the tip
also dxomark puts the pro more colour accurate than the 6
that and the off angle green/pink hues the none pro get are pretty well known now
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to help.
I prefer more neutral whites and grays to a 2% increase in "color accuracy". Display variance is so massive among all phones in the world, and color accuracy is already so good on high end phones, that color accuracy is a meme. What everyone does notice, however, is whether white and grays seem tinted yellow/orange/green etc.
ajsmsg78 said:
If you're rooted and flash a kernel you can enable HBM (high brightness mode) and then the screen is even brighter than an S21 Ultra or any other device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I already do that and it doesn't help that much. In direct sunlight with HBM enabled, the 6 Pro is definitely significantly dimmer than the 6's, which are both dimmer than my S21 Ultra, which is dimmer still than my 13 Pro Max.
It's classic google phone dimness. I'm shocked the 6 broke that mold...I just wish it was the 6 pro instead.

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