This is the hardest part for a TV. After the explosion, the smoke drifts. On an LED, the smoke looks gray. On Sony OLED, the smoke is illuminated from within by the leftover embers. You see volumetric fog that retains the color of the spent firework. The sparks fall down in a cascade; you can track individual pixels of light hitting the "invisible" bottom of the frame.
, this demo is tailored for premium OLEDs like the A95L or A80K to demonstrate deep black levels Optimizing Your Sony OLED Settings
In this deep dive, we will explore the physics, the engineering, and the emotional impact of watching a properly mastered fireworks display on Sony’s flagship OLED technology. 4K HDR Fireworks Sony Oled TV Demo
The demo utilizes the twin pillars of modern display technology:
| Attribute | Ideal | |-----------|-------| | Container | MKV or MP4 | | Codec | HEVC (H.265) | | Bit depth | 10-bit | | Color space | BT.2020 | | HDR format | HDR10 (HLG also works on Sony) | | Bitrate | 40–80 Mbps (not streaming bitrate) | This is the hardest part for a TV
For a television, replicating this environment requires mastering two opposites simultaneously:
: Sony’s proprietary streaming service offers much higher bitrates than YouTube, which is ideal for avoiding pixelation in fast-moving firework bursts. 2. Optimal Picture Settings for Fireworks On Sony OLED, the smoke is illuminated from
Often structured as a 1-to-2-minute loop for retail environments. How to View the Demo