Sharp Sharp M861-AVT3 86" UHD 4K HDR Commercial Monitor Review

The Sharp M861's 86-inch IPS panel scores in the 97th percentile, but its weak audio and lack of smart features make it a tool for pros, not consumers. Only buy this if your IT department demands it.

Screen Size 86
Resolution 3840x2160
Panel Type IPS
Refresh Rate 60
Hdr HDR10, HLG
Dolby Vision No
Dolby Atmos No
Hdmi Version 2.02
Sharp Sharp M861-AVT3 86" UHD 4K HDR Commercial Monitor tv
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The 30-Second Version

The Sharp M861 is a 97th percentile giant built for boardrooms, not living rooms. Its 86-inch IPS panel and professional controls are excellent for 24/7 digital signage, but its 39th percentile audio and lack of smart features make it a poor consumer choice. At $3899, only buy this if your IT department is signing off on it.

Overview

The Sharp M861 is an 86-inch commercial monitor that scores in the 97th percentile for display size and quality. That's not a typo. It's a massive, purpose-built panel designed to run 24/7 in boardrooms, lobbies, or control centers. It's not a TV, and that's the point. With a 500-nit IPS panel and support for HDR10 and HLG, it's built for clarity and reliability, not for binge-watching Netflix in your living room. Its scores tell the story: a stellar 92nd percentile for picture quality, but a 33rd percentile for gaming and a 22nd percentile for smart features. This is a tool, not an entertainment hub.

Performance

Performance here is all about the panel and its professional features. That 86-inch IPS screen lands in the 97th percentile for display, meaning it's one of the largest and sharpest commercial monitors you can get. The 500-nit brightness and 8000:1 contrast ratio combine for a picture quality score in the 92nd percentile, so text and graphics look crisp and clear, even in well-lit rooms. The HDR support (HDR10, HLG) is decent at the 83rd percentile, but don't expect the eye-popping highlights of a high-end OLED TV. Where it really shines for its intended use is the 24/7 operation rating, tile matrix support for video walls, and professional control systems like Crestron and AMX. The audio, however, is a weak spot at the 39th percentile, so you'll want external speakers.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 82.7
Audio 26.8
Smart 12.4
Gaming 23.8
Display 78.9
Connectivity 44.9
Social Proof 19.4
Picture Quality 94.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 86-inch IPS panel in the 97th percentile for display size and quality. 94th
  • Picture quality ranks in the 92nd percentile, with sharp 4K clarity. 83th
  • Built for 24/7 operation with professional control system support (Crestron, AMX). 79th
  • Flexible installation with portrait/landscape orientation and tile matrix support.
  • Good connectivity for a commercial display, scoring in the 66th percentile with dual HDMI and DisplayPort.

Cons

  • Audio performance is weak, sitting at the 39th percentile. The built-in 20W speakers are an afterthought. 12th
  • Gaming features are poor at the 33rd percentile, with a basic 60Hz refresh rate. 19th
  • Lacks smart TV features, scoring only in the 22nd percentile. This is a pure monitor. 24th
  • It's incredibly heavy at 47900g (over 105 lbs), making installation a two-person job at minimum. 27th
  • The 500-nit brightness, while good, is outclassed by brighter commercial and consumer TVs.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 86"
Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)
Panel Type IPS
Aspect Ratio 16:9

Picture Quality

Brightness 500 nits
Contrast Ratio 8000:1
Color Gamut 1.07 Billion Colors (10-Bit)

HDR

HDR Formats HDR10, HLG
Dolby Vision No
HDR10+ No
HLG Yes

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Audio

Wattage 20
Dolby Atmos No

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 2
HDMI Version 2.02
USB Ports 1
Ethernet Yes
VESA Mount 600x400

Power & Size

Weight 47.9 kg / 105.6 lbs

Value & Pricing

At $3899, the Sharp M861 is priced as a professional tool. You're paying for the large-format, reliable IPS panel and the commercial-grade features, not for flashy smart apps or gaming tech. Compared to high-end 85-inch consumer TVs from Sony or Samsung that can cost more, you're trading entertainment features for durability and control. For a corporate or signage deployment where uptime and integration are critical, that's a fair trade. For anyone else, it's an expensive way to get a very big, not-terribly-bright monitor.

Price History

‏٣٬٥٠٠ US$ ‏٤٬٠٠٠ US$ ‏٤٬٥٠٠ US$ ‏٥٬٠٠٠ US$ ‏٥٬٥٠٠ US$ ١٣ مارس١٦ مارس ‏٥٬١١٨ US$

vs Competition

Stacked against competitors, the M861 carves out a specific niche. The Sony BRAVIA 5 85" and LG OLED G5 83" will demolish it in contrast, HDR impact, and smart features, but they aren't built for 24/7 operation or professional control systems. The Hisense U65QF and TCL QM6K offer much higher brightness and better value for home theater use, but again, lack the commercial reliability. The Samsung Neo QLED is in another league for peak brightness and gaming. The Sharp's win is singular: if you need a giant, dependable digital signage or presentation canvas that you can network and control remotely, the others can't compete. If you want the best picture for movies or sports, look elsewhere.

Spec Sharp Sharp M861-AVT3 86" UHD 4K HDR Commercial Monitor Sony BRAVIA 5 Sony BRAVIA 5 98" 4K HDR Smart Mini-LED TV LG OLED evo - C5 series LG - 65" Class C5 Series OLED evo AI 4K UHD Smart Hisense U65QF Mini-LED Hisense - 75" Class U6 Series MiniLED QLED UHD 4K Samsung Neo QLED Samsung QN800D 75" 8K HDR Smart Neo QLED Mini-LED Roku Mini-LED QLED 4K - Pro Roku - 55" Class Pro Series 4K QLED Mini-LED Smart
Screen Size 86 98 65 75 75 55
Resolution 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 7680x4320 3840x2160
Panel Type IPS Mini-LED OLED Mini-LED QLED Mini-LED Mini-LED QLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 120 144 120 120
Hdr HDR10, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG HDR10+, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG
Smart Platform - Google TV webOS Fire TV Tizen Roku TV
Dolby Vision false true true true false true
Dolby Atmos false false true true true true
Hdmi Version 2.02 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1
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Common Questions

Q: Can I use this as a giant TV for my living room?

Technically yes, but we don't recommend it. Its gaming score is in the 33rd percentile (60Hz only), it has no smart TV apps (22nd percentile), and the audio is weak (39th percentile). You'd be paying a premium for features you won't use while missing the ones you want.

Q: How does the picture quality compare to a high-end TV?

Its picture quality is in the 92nd percentile for commercial monitors, which means it's very good for presentations and signage. However, compared to a high-end OLED or Mini-LED TV, it loses on contrast and HDR impact. The 500-nit brightness and 8000:1 contrast are solid but not spectacular by today's premium TV standards.

Q: What does '24/7 operation' actually mean?

It means the panel and components are designed and rated to run continuously without overheating or suffering premature wear. Consumer TVs aren't built for this. If your display needs to be on all day, every day (like in a lobby or transport hub), this is a critical feature that justifies the professional price tag.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the Sharp M861 if you're a home user, gamer, or movie buff. Its low percentiles in gaming (33rd), audio (39th), and smart features (22nd) make it a frustrating and overpriced choice for entertainment. Also, if you don't need professional control systems like Crestron or the ability to build a video wall tile matrix, you're paying for expensive features you'll never touch. There are better, brighter, and more feature-rich large-format TVs for the same money or less.

Verdict

We recommend the Sharp M861 only if you have a very specific, professional need. Its data is clear: elite display size and solid picture quality for a commercial panel, paired with terrible audio and no smart features. For a corporate lobby, digital signage array, or command center where reliability and control (Crestron, AMX, tile matrix) are non-negotiable, it's a strong, data-backed choice. For literally any other use—home theater, gaming, casual viewing—its weak percentiles in audio, gaming, and smart features make it a hard pass. There are better and cheaper ways to get a big screen.