Length:5.9 Feet - Size: 5.9ft/1.8m - FURUI HDMI1.4 Oxygen Free Copper(OFC) - Supported video resolutions: - 2K Full HD 1080p - Quad HD 1440p - 1K HD 720p - High performance material:Stronger than other HDMI cables. - Designed and built with only premium materials which means it can withstand at least 3,100 cycles of 90 degrees bend tests and hold up to 4.5KG - Application: - Works with all HDTVs, Blu-ray players - Xbox 360, PS3 and other HDMI devices
A**T
Five Stars
50' run from equipment room from Denon 6400H to an Optoma UHD60 projector, 4k 60Hz HDR, all solid.
P**C
50 ft Fiber 4k 60hz HDR to 4k UHD Samsung TV
Price is high compared to other cables. Connected 4k 60hz 50 ft there is not much else to review. Packaging was top notch as expected. Running PC to in other room. Purchased a 50ft Active USB cable along side to provide keyboard/mouse. Warranty that comes with the cable indicates the confidence of performance.I bought this cable for remote gaming across the house. I've been taking care of the cable zip tied with the 50 ft Active USB cable to ensure the performance continues.Few notes outside of the cable that I did spend a few hours figuring out-running Windows 10-Creative update pack provides HDR native-best results so far was to not over ride in NVIDA control panel for color(its under change resolution tab)-Right click desktop and go to display settings and slide the toggle to HDR-ARC I'm thinking not since it is not a bi directional(if im wrong please update from seller)-HDR UHD HDMI ports on samsung MU8000 need to be enabled not under "picture" option ironically but under general and under "external device manager"
I**D
This cable functions exactly as advertised and fulfills all of our HDR Video needs.
Just received the 50-ft Fiber 4K HDMI 2.0 Cable by FURUI. This cable functions exactly as advertised and fulfills all of our Video & Audio needs. It pushes Full HDR/Dolby ATMOS/ARC/3D at 60Hz without losing a step. It's compatible with the HDCP2.2 standard and carries amazing picture through an HDCP2.2 compatible receiver. For long-distance applications, an optical HDMI cable seems to be the best way to go and can easily push 18Gbps with no signal attenuation. To get the same performance and to meet the same spec from a copper HDMI 2.0 cable, you may be shelling out close to $500 for a 15 Meter (49.2 Feet) cable by AudioQuest.Current configuration:LG - OLED E7 (50 ft run to video source)Yamaha - RX A1070 (HDMI Direct Passthrough)LG - UP970 (Audio carried through FURUI cable via receiver HDMI Out)Application:The FURUI cable displays amazing HDR on 4K discs. For movies like 'Coco', the picture quality in HDR is vastly superior when compared to Blu-ray SDR. On the movie 'Everest' we were able to experience Dolby ATMOS with no issues, and the picture quality for high-paced moves like 'Lone Survivor' and 'Logan' displayed no detectable noise, while the on-screen elements moved smoothly. We are extremely happy with the high-quality performance of this fiber HDMI cable.A note on build-quality: The build quality on this cable is worth every dime. You definitely get what you pay for. The shielding on this cable is great, and I have no issues, as I have run it next to electrical wiring. The outer casing is strong and no slouch to its internal quality either. You can tell, its not cheaply made. Good materials inside and out. It will bend close to 90 degrees, and not recommended to go over that. For long-distance runs needing 18Gbps, a fiber HDMI cable is a smart choice.Update:Just a quick note on our Dolby Vision experience specifically - This cable pushes Dolby Vision with no issue. Incredible picture. Whether or not we connect the source directly from the 4K disc player or through the Yamaha receiver, the LG TV immediately recognizes that it is receiving a Dolby Vision formatted picture. Obviously the source media has to be filmed in Dolby Vision, and the player and receiver also have to support it as well. But this cable facilitates Dolby Vision beautifully. Tomb Raider & Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom look amazing in Dolby Vision.
T**1
Worth the money!
I have a dedicated Home Theater, with audiophile grade equipment. I also have an Xbox that I occasionally play. I’ve had intermittent problems with the video when using the Xbox with my Sony HD projector. I tried buying different HDMI cables, changing settings, updating firmware, taking my receiver out of the loop by going directly from the Xbox to the Projector. Nothing worked. The next thing I did was buy the Xbox One X, thinking that the newer hardware would resolve the problem. Well it didn’t. There was no software or firmware updates for my projector so I knew it was the connection media. As I said, I bought a couple different HDMI cables before to test, ones touting they support 4K, 18Gbps transfer rate etc, and I spent good money on those cables. I happened to stumble on an article online while researching a resolution and came across Active HDMI. I use a 50’ cable length and one thing I learned was Passive HDMI cables are at their best under 25’. The longer you go, the more of a voltage and current drop and can impact the handshake between the source and end device. So I bought this cable. First impression was there was no way this cable was going to resolve my problem. It is literally 1/3 the size in diameter of my existing HDMI cable. So I hooked this up and could not believe I found some that fixed the issue! Not too mention, I think the colors on my entire system are more rich. So for those of you pondering whether to pull the trigger on this, especially because it is on the higher side from a cost perspective, do not. I promise this will fix your problem if you have something similar to what I was going through.
K**.
4K 60hz at 50+ feet
I have the 50 foot model and I am able to get 60hz 4k easily (well I have a 2080 ti) with this cable.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
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