Update 01/2026
After conducting a series of calibrations of the OLED910 model with our clients, we noticed that the measurement results differ from those obtained during the initial tests. The factory tuning of the film mode proves to be significantly better than our first tests indicated. The white balance is set very precisely, with only a minimal red dominance. The factory colour reproduction holds close to reference standards – average Delta E errors hover around 3-4, which is an excellent result for factory settings. However, there is some concern about how the television manages brightness. Analysis of the Gamma (SDR) and EOTF (HDR) graphs shows a tendency to excessively "pull" details from the shadows. In practice, this means that the image can appear too bright, resulting in a loss of black depth in favour of visible details that should remain hidden. Of course, this effect can be effectively corrected during professional calibration.
Unfortunately, when it comes to colour reproduction straight out of the box, in Filmmaker mode the OLED910 performs really poorly. The television excessively highlights the blue colour, and at times it looks almost like a store mode. This gives the impression that the manufacturer hasn’t quite tuned the device well. The result is that colours appear unnatural, and the overall effect resembles a somewhat exaggerated display setup in a market. HDR content presents much better, where apart from a slight loss of details in the blacks, there’s not much to complain about. The problem is that in everyday viewing, it’s actually SDR material that matters most – and on the OLED910 it simply looks poor and falls far short of what we would expect from a television of this class.
We also took a close look at how Blaupunkt handles colours in movie mode, and here the matter is, to put it simply, twofold. We must once again clearly separate what we see in the standard SDR format from what happens when HDR is switched on, as they are two completely different worlds. Let's start with the better side of the coin. If you're planning to watch traditional TV, YouTube, or older films on this television, you can count on really well-tuned colours. In our test sample, the white balance in movie mode performed exceptionally well, which honestly surprised us. Of course, to avoid being too rosy, we noticed some drawbacks. Looking at the gamma charts, we observed that the processor struggles with properly dimming the image in its brightest areas. Additionally, there is quite a strong, at times overly aggressive, red saturation, which resulted in visible errors in reproducing certain shades. Despite this, overall, the image in SDR is simply solid and watchable without a grimace on your face. Unfortunately, the magic fades when we re-enter the world of HDR. Here, Blaupunkt behaves as if we suddenly switched it to store mode, and in its worst rendition. The excess blue in the white balance is so significant that it’s glaring, ruining any realism in the scene. Furthermore, the television interprets brightness very loosely, which, upon analysing the EOTF curve, clearly showed that for most of the time, colours simply appear washed out and lacking depth. This is also perfectly evident in the colour errors that become apparent in this mode. Once again, we are left with the same conclusion: Blaupunkt in SDR mode looks significantly better and more natural than in HDR, which seems to be forcefully added without proper refinement.