400 nits is not enough for HDR. Below is the official VESA's HDR panel classification. It does list 400 both for LCD and OLED panels, but growing number of panel enthusiasts and display calibration organisations are putting a pressure on VESA to drop 400, as many vendors use it to sell fake HDR laptops, TVs and monitors. If anyone wants an entry level HDR,
never go below 600 nits, 90% of DCI-P3 and 70% of Rec.2020/2100 colour space.
Summary of DisplayHDR Specs under CTS 1.1 Information about the CTS 1.2 specifications announced May 7, 2024 may be found here. The table below is a summary of the specifications for the VESA DisplayHDR and DisplayHDR True Black standards as they are updated by CTS 1.1 released on September 4th...
displayhdr.org
Two best websites I always use to check reviews and compare TVs and monitors are below. Recommended.
Compare TVs in FlatpanelsHD's TV Database
www.flatpanelshd.com
Find the best products for your needs, based on our reviews, ratings and recommendations.
www.rtings.com
Good AVR needs good TV.
For AVRs, it's about bandwidth and how much space certain video signals occupy. New Yamahas should eventually pass-through 40 Gbps signal. In this video pipeline, you can pass through many different resolutions and refresh rates. If port can can 4K/120, it can also do 8K/60. They just need to put all supported resolutions in AVR's EDID, so that as many different TVs, projectors and monitors can work with it.
The maximum is:
4K/120 10-bit RGB uncompressed needs 40 Gbps
8K/60 10-bit
4:2:0 chroma uncompressed need 40 Gbps
These AVRs will be able to do even more with DSC protocol, if source and display support it. For example, an image of 8K/60 10-bit
RGB needs 80 Gbps, but because HDMI port is limited to 40 Gbps, AVR would apply DSC to compress it to 40 Gbps in ratio 2:1. Here is the table with data rates.
View attachment 51908