LG TVs now meet Consumer Technology Association specifications for 8K Ultra HD

LG SIGNATURE OLED 8K-certification

LG announced that its TVs are the first in the world to exceed the strict requirements established by the Consumer Technology Association, CTA, to define the new generation of 8K Ultra HD products and services delivering four times more detail than 4K TV and 16 times more than HDTV.

The official industry 8K Ultra HD designation and logo were developed by the US-based CTA to set a clear definition for retailers and consumers to help better identify products that meet key 8K Ultra HD requirements. LG’s Real 8K TVs, which will make their debut at CES 2020, are the first to exceed CTA’s specific requirements including those related to resolution, digital inputs, high dynamic range, upscaling, bit depth and measurement methodology.

The CTA based its 8K definition on the threshold specified by the International Committee for Display Metrology. The measurement guidelines based on contrast modulation state that resolution must meet a 50% minimum CM threshold along with at least 33 million active pixels in order to qualify as 8K UHD.

Starting in January 2020, every LG 8K TV will display CTA’s 8K UHD logo. New 2020 models build on LG’s leadership position as the only manufacturer offering Real 8K TVs in two categories: OLED, LG SIGNATURE OLED 8K and LCD, LG 8K NanoCell TV, all delivering CM values in the 90% range, while some other models in the industry remain in the low double digits.

Third-party testing by the global product testing and certification organisation Intertek verified that the 75-inch LG NanoCell 8K TV far surpasses the CM measurement requirement set by ICDM, with the unit returning an impressive 90% CM horizontally and 91% CM vertically.