Adjusting specific settings on Hisense TVs can enhance image quality without special equipment. Key changes include selecting the right picture mode and tweaking brightness, contrast, and motion features. These tweaks apply to models like the U7 and U6 MiniLED series.
New Hisense TVs, such as the recently announced U7 and U6 MiniLED models, benefit from simple picture adjustments visible to the naked eye. Access settings via the menu under Display & Sound > Picture, though locations vary by model and operating system. Note that changes may apply only to specific inputs like HDMI 1; use Apply Picture Settings to copy across inputs if desired. Picture modes divide into Vivid (Dynamic), Standard, Sports, and PC/Game, which add processing and cooler colors suitable for live content, versus Theater Day, Theater Night (or Cinema), and Filmmaker modes that reduce processing for accurate colors in scripted shows and movies. Theater or Filmmaker modes deliver natural colors and work well across content, including HDR which auto-switches modes. For brightness, adjust backlight for overall light output; avoid mistaking it for shadow controls. Set gamma between 2.0 and 2.4, starting at 2.2, better for medium brightness in varying room light; leave Dynamic Tone Mapping for HDR as is. Turn off HDR Enhancer, which forces SDR to mimic HDR. Contrast controls bright highlights—test with clouds or snow. Black Level (sometimes labeled Brightness) handles shadows; use dark scenes like Batman movies to fine-tune without losing detail. Leave Color, Hue, and Dynamic Color Enhancer unchanged. Reduce Sharpness to near zero for best results; use Smooth Gradient sparingly for color banding, but disable Noise Reduction to preserve detail. Select warm Color Temperature for realism. In advanced menus, disable Motion Enhancement (also MEMC) to avoid the soap opera effect from generated frames, especially in movies. Custom options adjust Blur and Judder Reduction. Motion Clearness inserts black frames for sharpness but dims the image and may flicker.