Display Measurement

As mentioned before, the G8 is a special device for LG as it represents the very first G-series phone which comes with an OLED screen. This is quite intriguing but also worrisome as the company hasn’t had a great track-record with OLED displays, suffering either from display quality issues or from power consumption issues.

For the new G8 to be considered a worthwhile consideration, it needs to get the display right. Thankfully, when it comes to the quality of the display panel (Uniformity), the phone doesn’t showcase any issues, which leaves display calibration as well as power consumption the remaining deciding factors.

As always, we thank X-Rite and SpecraCal, as our measurements are performed with an X-Rite i1Pro 2 spectrophotometer, with the exception of black levels which are measured with an i1Display Pro colorimeter. Data is collected and examined using SpectraCal's CalMAN software.

Compared to the G7’s LCD screen, one expected degradation from the move to an OLED screen is lower brightness levels, as the G7’s RGBW display showcased some class-leading display brightness reaching up to 1000 nits at 100% APL white.

Display Measurement - Maximum Brightness Display Measurement - Maximum Brightness (Boost)

In manual maximum brightness, the G8 goes up to 388 nits when displaying full white, while when in bright conditions under the automatic mode the display boosts up to 567 nits. While per se the figures aren’t bad, the G8 does lag behind the newer Samsung S10 and also especially lags behind the G7’s incredibly high brightness levels.

In bright daylight situations I found the G8 to be acceptable, but not outstanding. It’s to be noted that LG scales brightness very aggressively with varying APL (average picture level), but even in lower APL levels the phone just isn’t as bright as competing devices.


SpectraCal CalMAN
   

In terms of display calibrations, LG offers a grand total of 7 different display modes, including “Auto”, “Cinema”, “Sports”, “Game”, “Photos”, “Web” and a more customisable “Expert”.

Among all of these, “Web” is the only sRGB gamut target display mode, while the “Cinema” mode seemingly targets a more accurate Display P3 profile. We’re limiting our evaluation to these two modes as they represent the most accurate modes on the G8.

Colour balance on the G8 unfortunately is a major issue, and although the “Web” profile showcases the best white-balance, it’s still veering off towards blues with a higher 6847K average CCT. The colour balance isn’t an issue of the profile but seemingly an issue of the calibration, as the display is able to showcase near perfect whites when at maximum brightness, with an ever increasing deviation the lower the brightness goes.

Gamma is also a major issue for the G8. At 200 nits, the phone is massively off-target with a 2.7 average gamma, with mid-levels exceeding 2.8, meaning tones appear darker than they should be. Again this issue is highly dependent on brightness as it’s not nearly as pronounced at maximum brightness.


SpectraCal CalMAN

Display Measurement - Greyscale Accuracy

The end greyscale accuracy score for the G8 ends up at a measly DeltaE2000 of 4.85. While this is an improvement over the G7’s atrocious calibration, it’s still quite bad. This time around it’s not the colour balance that is the worst offender, but rather the massively off-mark gamma.


SpectraCal CalMAN

As mentioned, the “Web” profile is the only mode which offers a target gamut seemingly aiming for sRGB. However things are still quite off the mark here as it overshoots the gamut in the greens, and ever so slightly in the reds. What is again the key offender here isn’t this slightly larger-than-sRGB gamut, but rather the fact that the saturations are non-linear, showing some clear saturation compression which tends to oversaturate all levels.

Display Measurement - Saturation Accuracy - sRGB dE2000

The resulting deltaE2000 is one of the worst we’ve ever measured, reaching 8.3 which is borderline unacceptable.


SpectraCal CalMAN

The “Cinema” mode offers the most accurate Display P3 gamut profile, and here again we’re seeing the same issues as on the “Web” profile. LG again overshoots the gamut in the greens, although this time doesn’t reach the target red levels. We see the same saturation compression issue with non-linear levels which means lower tone levels are just much too oversaturated.

Display Measurement - Saturation Accuracy - Display-P3

Here we have a comparison to the G7 (The phone didn’t have an sRGB mode), and shockingly it fares even slightly worse in terms of colour accuracy than last year’s disastrous result, with a dE2000 of 7.03.


SpectraCal CalMAN


SpectraCal CalMAN

Display Measurement - Gretag–Macbeth Colour Accuracy

Finally, in our Gretag-Macbeth test of commonly found tones such as skin tones, the G8 is just an outright disaster. I would like to point out to the detailed dE2000 results of the individual tones which exceed 10 and some even reach values of up to 15.

While most tones aren’t too terrible in terms of their target hue, their saturation and luminosity (gamma) are completely off the mark.

The end result is a shameful dE2000 of 8.92, which I think is the worst display calibration we’ve ever measured on a phone. It’s to be noted that the measurements here are done in the “Web” profile, LG’s other profiles are even worse than this.

Overall Display Verdict

While the G8’s display has no issues in terms of uniformity and showcases great viewing angles, and its brightness levels is somewhat acceptable, the phone simply doesn’t have any accurate display mode.

I find it very odd that LG had introduced the new supposedly accurate “Web” profile in the V40 and G8, yet the company only did a half-hearted job in terms of actually making this an accurate display mode. The result is that the G8’s colours are consistently off-mark, with some of the worst calibration results we’ve ever seen in a smartphone.

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  • PeachNCream - Thursday, May 2, 2019 - link

    You audio people are oddities to say the least. Most of us don't really care about what umoos and ah-ahs are driving our transmorgofiers in high-low-moosepedience headphones and we don't think that one thing "destroys" another thing in terms of sound quality in our car (which is filled with road noise) because we don't live in our vehicles. While it's perfectly fine that you care and you hear things that the rest of us just shrug about, most of us use a cheap pair of earbuds or headphones we spent less than $20 on, never do anything to our car's sound besides turning the radio on or off, and sometimes spend hours playing 128kbps mp3s on a phone's integrated speaker because who cares anyway. I suggest not worrying about it. Do your research, live deep in that fidelity world, and don't hassle the reviewers for skimming over stuff that is entirely unimportant for the vast majority of us that only care to the extent that we can hear the phone ring when we get a call.
  • ZolaIII - Sunday, May 5, 2019 - link

    Don't, I mean even assume you are speaking for majority of people. There is a gear that is both affordable and sounds rather good. From product that are in music lovers category to entry level audiophile one's. So you can buy a more than decent can's for 25~30$ (for example Superlux HD-668B over the ear or MEE M6 Pro first gen EMI's), hopefully the good DAC for 25~30$ soon or a DAP (DAC, BT) for 100$ right now, while pair of good car speakers (main bass/mids unit's + twitters) is around 140$. Problem with LG is that their implementation simply isn't really good to shine with budget lo impedance headphones.
  • joser0913 - Thursday, October 10, 2019 - link

    Andrei, you might want to read this article (http://somegadgetguy.com/2017/11/30/how-android-po...
    I think Juan Bagnell, as well as many other reviewers are right, LG delivers the best wired headphone experience and that should be highlighted
  • ZolaIII - Wednesday, May 1, 2019 - link

    You don't use headphones for the measurement that's actually very wrong approach. I assume nothing changed much nor did LG make it right as usual so it probably stayed the same.
    https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php...
    While DAC is very capable for actually enjoying it with low impedance headphones as most people use it anyhow you need to look elsewhere, recommended goes for times being to Shanling M0 DAP for some 100$. We will see how things go with Meizu's new USB DAC dingle...
  • dxcanas - Tuesday, April 30, 2019 - link

    The G8's site describes a "night shot mode" at the bottom of the page, and I've read of it in other reviews. I couldn't find any mention of this mode in the llow light evaluation - was it not helpful?

    https://www.lg.com/us/mobile-phones/g8-thinq/camer...
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Tuesday, April 30, 2019 - link

    There's no dedicated mode, it just automatically goes into a lower light mode. It's active in the sample shots.
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Wednesday, May 1, 2019 - link

    As a correction, the mode is actually there as a dedicated mode buried in the "More" mode settings. It gives the same results as auto in low-light.
  • dxcanas - Wednesday, May 1, 2019 - link

    Cool, thanks for the update and correction!
  • Peddy2299 - Wednesday, May 1, 2019 - link

    LG makes some if the best phones on the market. The best phones for me on the market arr LGs. They meet my daily phone needs on the high-end basis. No other phone does that for me. All the comparing on stuff those other brands just don't work out for me.
  • sonny73n - Wednesday, May 1, 2019 - link

    Sure. Because you don’t have much to choose from at local stores if you live in the US. It’s hard to buy something when you can’t physically feel it. But if you dare to take a risk with one of those Chinese phones like Huawei, Meizu, Oppo or ZTE, I’m sure you won’t be disappointed because they’re much better in terms of performance and quality per dollar. They won’t rob you like LG, Samsung, Sony or Apple do.

    I used to buy at least 2 “high end” phones per years just for myself. Glad I woke up. Now a $300 Chinese phone is just as good.

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