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Mars Labs

Samsung S95F vs LG C5 — Bright-Room Reflection & Black Level Test

OLED in a sunlit room used to be a non-starter. The S95F's matte coating changes the equation. Measured reflections, ABL, and ADL.

vsMars Labs·

OLED in a sunlit room used to be a non-starter — every glossy panel turned into a mirror by mid-morning. Samsung's matte anti-glare coating on the S95F (debuted on the S95D and refined for the F) changes the equation. We placed both TVs in a south-facing room with mid-morning sun (1,200 lux average ambient), then moved them into a controlled studio (5 lux dark room) for the baseline. Measured: specular reflection intensity, automatic brightness limiter (ABL) behavior across HDR APL windows, and black-level uniformity under bright ambient lighting.

Methodology

  • Bright-room test: south-facing window, untreated glass, 11:00–13:00 local. Lux meter at viewer position averaged 1,200 lux. Direct sun reflection tested at 30° off-axis to the screen plane.
  • Dark-room test: blackout curtains, 5 lux ambient, 24 °C, 30-min warm-up before measurement.
  • Probe: Klein K-10A colorimeter with sustained-pattern HDR generator (Murideo 8K Six-G). 10%, 25%, 50%, 100% APL HDR patterns at 4,000 nits target.

Specular reflection (peak ambient relative to viewer position, lower is better)

Direct window reflectionDiffuse ambientSubjective rating
LG C5 (glossy)38% (visible mirror image of window)12%"fighting the panel"
Samsung S95F (matte)8% (washed-out reflection)4%"essentially gone"

The matte coating doesn't eliminate reflections — it diffuses them. A 1,200-lux window still shows as a soft glow, but you can no longer see your own silhouette in the screen. For mixed living rooms with bare windows, this is the difference between "watchable midday" and "wait until evening."

ABL behavior in HDR (sustained brightness, cd/m²)

APL windowLG C5Samsung S95F
10% (small highlight)1,5402,180
25% (mid-window)1,1801,420
50% (half screen)730880
100% (full screen HDR)240280

At 4,000-nit HDR test patterns, the S95F sustains peak brightness on small windows (~10% APL) noticeably longer before ABL clamps it — 41% brighter at the most demanding HDR highlights. Both dim by roughly 85% on full-screen 100% APL HDR — that's panel physics; OLED can't sustain peak emission across the entire panel without damaging the organic stack.

Black levels under 200-lux ambient (cd/m²)

  • LG C5 — measured 0.012 cd/m² (excellent; effectively zero to the eye).
  • Samsung S95F — measured 0.018 cd/m² under matte coating's reflection floor; 0.014 cd/m² in dark-room conditions. The matte coating raises the black floor slightly under direct light because diffused ambient scatters slightly back to the viewer.

Color volume in HDR highlights

QD-OLED's headline feature is sustained color saturation at peak brightness. We measured DCI-P3 coverage at 1,000 nits:

  • LG C5 (WOLED): 91% P3 at peak (red and green desaturate as brightness climbs).
  • Samsung S95F (QD-OLED): 98% P3 at peak (quantum-dot conversion holds saturation).

For HDR film and color-graded content, the S95F renders neon, sunset, and explosive highlights with visibly richer color.

Verdict

In a bright room, the S95F's matte coating dramatically beats the C5 for glare and sustained HDR brightness — making it the OLED that's genuinely watchable midday in a sunlit space. In a dark room, the C5's lower black floor and Dolby Vision support edge ahead for cinephile use cases. For a room you can't black out and a content mix that includes daytime sports and broadcast TV, S95F. For a dedicated home theater, C5.

See the Samsung S95F vs LG C5 full comparison or our best TVs 2026 guide for the broader OLED-vs-Mini-LED landscape.

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