Haier M90E is a fully-fledged Mini LED television utilizing a VA panel. Such a technological combination usually guarantees deep blacks and high contrast. In the tested model with a 55-inch diagonal, the backlighting system is based on 240 independent dimming zones, and their number increases proportionally in the larger variants of this model. Laboratory measurements confirm the high hardware potential – in synthetic tests with active dimming, the contrast exceeded 100,000:1.
However, the dry measurement data does not translate into an ideal picture in real-world applications, which forced us to lower the score in this section. The bottleneck turned out to be the software controlling the zones. The algorithm operates too aggressively and replicates errors we observed earlier in the more expensive M95E model. The problem becomes apparent when bright objects move against a dark background on the screen. The system struggles to smoothly adjust the brightness of individual zones, resulting in unnatural flickering of specific parts of the image. Instead of smooth motion, we see an effect reminiscent of a flickering damaged streetlight, which our test night scene from the film Sicario 2 ruthlessly exposed.
TCL C7L is a Mini LED TV, which in the 65-inch variant we tested, is equipped with over 1000 local dimming zones. This, combined with a proprietary VA panel (referred to by TCL CSOT as HVA 2.0), delivers really decent results in terms of black levels and contrast. In most of the scenes we measured, black levels and contrast looked really good, and in the easiest shots, the black was deep enough to resemble that known from OLED screens. We are, of course, talking about the least demanding shots with a lot of black on the screen. However, when a larger number of bright elements appear on the screen, and black no longer dominates so strongly, it becomes clear that the TCL C7L – like most Mini LED TVs – has its issues with managing local dimming zones.
This is particularly evident in the standard black bars in movies recorded in the panoramic format 2.35:1. In this case, a clear halo effect, or bright light glow, can appear on the black bars or around small, bright objects. The contrast then drastically drops – from laboratory values of around 200,000:1 to about 10,000:1, which is quite noticeable in a completely dark room. It is worth remembering that this should not be treated as a flaw of the TV but rather as a characteristic of mini-LED technology. Of course, this effect becomes much less bothersome when we turn on at least some soft, diffused light in the room... which I definitely recommend doing during viewing sessions on any LCD TV.