View Full Version : Can somebody point me to the TV buying discussion thread?
Glengoyne
06-12-2012, 02:52 AM
There is too much made out of Hz and with today's tv's, 60hz sets are fine. I'm not expert though, so maybe at 60" and beyond, it is noticable. Remember, the source footage is never greater than 60hz.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2379206,00.asp
I totally understand that more than 60 Hz should not make any difference. However, I find sports especially football unwatchable even on many 120 Hz models. My sister purchased a 240 Hz LCD this winter, and I was pleasantly surprised while watching bowl games and playoffs this year. That said, it completely botched the non sports content I watched. The artificial handling of the frames beyond 60 Hz was too much for me and most of the family as well.
I am strictly a plasma guy due to this strange affliction that I shouldn't suffer from, because like your article states...it shouldn't matter.
I. J. Reilly
06-12-2012, 08:32 AM
Spectre is another multi china TinbAwn.
Westinghouse, Spectre, Sylvania, and any of a dozen store brands'
So are you saying all these brands are complete crap? I'm looking for a cheap bedroom TV in the 40" range and the above brands have some enticing offers.
CU Tiger
06-12-2012, 09:25 AM
So are you saying all these brands are complete crap? I'm looking for a cheap bedroom TV in the 40" range and the above brands have some enticing offers.
Not at all, in fact many times they are using system architecture that is a few years old, discarded from Panny, Sharp, or Pioneer.
They are all produced in one of two factories, often on the same assembly line with the case differences being the only differentiating factor. Ive even heard stories of mis boxed product.
The product has the potential to be decent or a giant turd as their quality control is virtually non existent. For a non bleeding edge they are hard to beat. In fact I have a Dynex or Spectre in my daughter's bedroom and one in our RV.
CU Tiger
06-12-2012, 09:27 AM
Dola - should probably clarify TinBawn is either the company that manufacturers these or imports them, I never could get definitive clarity on that. But the same company represents about 11 brands.
When we dabbled in component level repair, you literally would often have a control board with a dozen part numbers on the bag.
MizzouRah
06-12-2012, 03:46 PM
I bought my wife a dynex 32" for the bedroom and so far, she loves it, HD looks great.
I think I paid like $180 for it some time ago.
As soon as my Sony craps the bed.. I'm going to get that Sceptre 50" for $499 from Walmart.
MizzouRah
06-20-2012, 10:12 PM
Purchased the Sceptre and VERY early impressions are extremely HAPPY. Picture is superb, even the non-HD stuff looks better than my Sony does. Needing a bit of tweaking, but I'm super happy.
$500 for a 50" HDTV, can't really ask for more..
Swaggs
06-20-2012, 10:18 PM
Things that suck: Got a 3D TV (sweet!) and then found out that my cable box isn't calibrated for 3D (not sweet!). Sadly, we have a few too many DVRed shows on it to be able to switch it out any time soon.
Question: Do 3D TVs need anything special in the HDMI department?
I saw Best Buy had some that were "Made for 3D!" for like $80. I bought a bunch of HDMI cables from Amazon awhile back for like $20 total and would much rather go that route, unless the quality will be way, way worse.
stevew
06-20-2012, 10:36 PM
Lungs-
Sharp is releasing a 90" this year if you have a spare 11K.
MizzouRah
06-21-2012, 01:42 AM
I doubt any HDMI cable is different than the other.. except for price.
chadritt
06-21-2012, 01:45 AM
I bought a bunch of HDMI cables for $2 - $4 each a few years ago and they work perfectly still. The cables only have two states, working perfectly and not working at all. Theres no in between or variations of picture quality. Its a beauty of things being 1s and 0s, it either gets them all or it doesnt know whats happening.
stevew
06-21-2012, 02:26 AM
I doubt any HDMI cable is different than the other.. except for price.
you might need version 1.4 certified cables but they are most likely dirt cheap at this point.
like 99% of digital based stuff is indistinguishable, the only difference might be if you need a thin cable cause of the depth of the TV. If you're going a longer distance, you might want a better cable too, but we're talking 50' or more.
If you're never going to touch this once you set it up, I'd buy pretty much one level above the cheapest shit available from the internet and tell the in store sales guy to fuck his own mother.
CU Tiger
06-21-2012, 07:37 AM
The cables only have two states, working perfectly and not working at all. Theres no in between or variations of picture quality. Its a beauty of things being 1s and 0s, it either gets them all or it doesnt know whats happening.
this is simply not true. While the signal is 1 and 0 its carried through electrtical current/wave forms that are pretty hard to distinguish for a processor and pretty easy to get EMF noise in.
you might need version 1.4 certified cables but they are most likely dirt cheap at this point.
like 99% of digital based stuff is indistinguishable, the only difference might be if you need a thin cable cause of the depth of the TV. If you're going a longer distance, you might want a better cable too, but we're talking 50' or more.
If you're never going to touch this once you set it up, I'd buy pretty much one level above the cheapest shit available from the internet and tell the in store sales guy to fuck his own mother.
This however is spot on.
There is actually a pretty major difference in cable quality. You just wont see it until you get into long runs. Id start at 20' not 50' but at 50' ray charles can tell the difference.
For a standard box in same room as anything but the largest tv configuration, shit buy the cheapest crap you can find
Logan
06-21-2012, 08:13 AM
Geez, in what instances do people run 50' of HDMI wiring?
SteveMax58
06-21-2012, 08:47 AM
Things that suck: Got a 3D TV (sweet!) and then found out that my cable box isn't calibrated for 3D (not sweet!). Sadly, we have a few too many DVRed shows on it to be able to switch it out any time soon.
Question: Do 3D TVs need anything special in the HDMI department?
I agree with the comments by Steve & CU on the cable. I would also say anything longer than 20' and thats when you should be more cautious of cable quality.
On the cable box side...this is going to depend on your video provider to a degree.
There are different types of 3d content out there. Cable companies today support "frame-compatible" 3d. This means the 3d video is essentially the same as an HD video feed (to the cable box/HDMI interface) and the TV simply does all the work. This is perfectly fine to pass through from a video standpoint.
The part that might depend on your provider is whether they will allow that content to a cable box that cannot render the guide (and a handful of other little nuances) while in 3d mode on the TV. I'm not aware of any that do, so long as the cable box has an HDMI interface, but I suppose its possible a few might. Others do all of their 3d in MPEG4...so that might also be a limitation of your box vs another.
Now where HDMI 1.4 comes into play is regarding "auto-switching" between 2d & 3d. HDMI 1.4 specifies a standard messaging structure, however a 1.3 interface on the cable box could pass these messages through as the electrical spec is the same. The reading of the messages would be the job of the 1.4 TV...unless of course the cable co. wants to support some overlay features in 3d mode (such as the guide) and in this case, they may place their own restrictions on the cable box (my company does not for instance).
One thing to note on HDMI...as of 1.4 they have really made it more confusing to consumers (imo). They no longer allow manufacturers and anybody selling licensed HDMI compliant products to advertise the HDMI version number because 1.4 has a lot of optional features. So in their effort to reduce confusion of what 1.4 means...they want the HDMI features to be spelled out (such as ethernet, 3d, etc.).
The problem I see is that these features aren't overly intuitive to consumers unless you include the hdmi version. After all, what does the 3d feature mean? There are certainly many ways to display 3d that are agnostic to an HDMI interface.
Anyway...long story short...I'd suggest trying to navigate to your cable provider's free 3d content and see if it actually works. I wouldn't trust what the average customer rep tells you about that type of thing.
Swaggs
06-21-2012, 08:55 AM
Yeah -- I checked it out and it shows a split screen. Basically the 3D channels and content has identical screens on each side of the screen. It is an older Scientific Atlanta cable box and when I did a google search, I saw that Comcast has a few other options for 3D/HD/DVR customers. I don't think it will change my pricing (although I wouldn't be shocked).
Anyway, I didn't really buy it for the 3D. It was a significant size upgrade for us that looks like it will perform well for sports, jumps us up from 720 to 1080, and was a pretty good price for a brand I trust (Samsung). I can't see us sitting around, wearing 3D glasses, watching TV too often -- just thought it wouldn't hurt to have (given the good price). It was bundled with a Smart, wireless 3D Blu Ray (our existing DVD player is like 12 years old, so I already feel like we leapt ahead a few generations. Just need to figure out how everything works. :)
lungs
06-21-2012, 09:04 AM
Lungs-
Sharp is releasing a 90" this year if you have a spare 11K.
Hah. That might be a budget buster.....
SteveMax58
06-21-2012, 09:05 AM
Oh, so if you can actually see the split screen that would mean you just need to set the TV to the right 3d mode. This would be SBS (Side-By-Side) 3d mode. based on your description.
If you see the split between the top of the screen & bottom of the screen...then you'd use the Top-Bottom mode (I guess self-explanatory enough).
Swaggs
06-21-2012, 09:24 AM
Oh, so if you can actually see the split screen that would mean you just need to set the TV to the right 3d mode. This would be SBS (Side-By-Side) 3d mode. based on your description.
If you see the split between the top of the screen & bottom of the screen...then you'd use the Top-Bottom mode (I guess self-explanatory enough).
Ah... Well, that makes sense and was easy to do.
I think I need to play with it a bit. It seems to work, but when some text came up on the screen, it didn't line up correctly.
cartman
06-21-2012, 09:31 AM
This is a good time to bring up my favorite site for buying A/V cables and various extras (wall plates, speaker mounts, banana plugs, etc.):
HDMI Cable, Home Theater Accessories, HDMI Products, Cables, Adapters, Video/Audio Switch, Networking, USB, Firewire, Printer Toner, and more! (http://www.monoprice.com)
They have great prices on their stuff, and it works like a champ. I've been a big fan of theirs for a long time.
SteveMax58
06-21-2012, 10:36 AM
Ah... Well, that makes sense and was easy to do.
I think I need to play with it a bit. It seems to work, but when some text came up on the screen, it didn't line up correctly.
Yeah anything guide or closed captioning related is likely to make your eyes hurt. :) You'll want to put the TV back in 2d mode before doing anything like that.
Also keep in mind that the 2 images you see in 2d mode are close but not actually identical. There's a slight offset between them purposely. So when you go 2d to 3d mode on the TV, text may not be legible without the glasses either.
stevew
06-21-2012, 11:51 AM
Geez, in what instances do people run 50' of HDMI wiring?
I ran 50' In my basement so that I could hook my computer up to the TV. But that was cause the wireless options were significantly more money.
CU Tiger
06-21-2012, 08:00 PM
Geez, in what instances do people run 50' of HDMI wiring?
Data closet.
In many higher end homes we did we'd wire everything to a single closet and use IR repeaters to remote control everything in this closet from every room. Stick a DVD in and watch it on every tv if you like.
Landshark44
06-28-2012, 05:44 PM
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/LG+-+55%22+Class+-+LED+-+1080p+-+120Hz+-+HDTV/4846747.p?skuId=4846747&id=1218551139323
I'm about to buy this one unless somebody talks me out of it in the next day or so.... What you guys think?
Autumn
06-28-2012, 08:11 PM
I just got a 27' inch non-flatscreen off of Freecycle to replace my 10 year old TV with a broken speaker, and discovered it only has one set of RCA jacks. Is this the right thread for me?
Landshark44
06-29-2012, 10:07 AM
Is there a "rule" for figuring out the correct size tv for an area?
room i'm putting tv in is approximately 15' x 15'. Hanging tv on 60 inch wall, so I'm thinking 55 is perfect. saw some posts that said sometimes a TV is "too big " for a room.... would I be better off getting a 52"?
DaddyTorgo
06-29-2012, 10:29 AM
Is there a "rule" for figuring out the correct size tv for an area?
room i'm putting tv in is approximately 15' x 15'. Hanging tv on 60 inch wall, so I'm thinking 55 is perfect. saw some posts that said sometimes a TV is "too big " for a room.... would I be better off getting a 52"?
It's usually based on the distance that the primary seating is going to be away from it. It's also personal comfort though. If I were you I'd measure the distance from the wall to where you'll be sitting and bring a tape measure to the store and stand that far away and see if you think it's too big.
What Size HDTV is Right for My Room? (http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000021501)
gstelmack
06-29-2012, 11:00 AM
There's another good chart out there that shows resolution, screen size, and distance to know when you would notice the pixels. Part of the whole retina display / DPI debate. I'll see if I can find it. Because a 55" 1080P is not a 55" 720P when it comes to viewing distance.
gstelmack
06-29-2012, 11:05 AM
Ah, here's a version:
1080p charted: Viewing distance to screen size -- Engadget (http://hd.engadget.com/2006/12/09/1080p-charted-viewing-distance-to-screen-size/)
INDalltheway
08-29-2012, 01:50 AM
FOFC - you all never seem to disappoint me so I had to come to you guys with this all important life choice - buying a HDTV. I will start out and state that I have a soft budget of $1200. I wouldn't be the least bit upset if I spent under this by a good margin, but also could expand a little if something warrants it. I and looking at TVs between 46-52 inches. When I make purchases like this, I want to make sure I buy something that will last and will be enjoyed for a while. I am not interested in 3D unless someone could convince me of it's place in the future of television. My main uses for the set will be to watch HD sports, Xbox/playstation, and whatever the missus watches. Thanks guys!
gstelmack
08-29-2012, 10:05 AM
http://www.sears.com/panasonic-viera-174-50inch-u50-series-full-hd-plasma/p-05775502000P?prdNo=6&blockNo=6&blockType=G6
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_05775532000P?mv=rr
http://www.sears.com/panasonic-50inch-smart-viera-3d-plasma-hdtv-tc/p-05775592000P?prdNo=5&blockNo=5&blockType=G5
cartman
08-29-2012, 03:28 PM
Just when you got used to 1080p, here comes 4K!
Sony releases first 4K TV: The 84-inch XBR-84X900 | TV and Home Theater - CNET Reviews (http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-33199_7-57502521-221/sony-releases-first-4k-tv-the-84-inch-xbr-84x900/)
IlliniCub
01-31-2013, 11:01 PM
Anybody have any experience with the VIZO 47 inch lcd 3d tv? it's only like 500 or 600 bucks at walmart and my tv just died...It uses the regular theatre 3d glasses. Thinking about picking it up tomorrow after work...I really don't wanna spend much over 600 at this point as its kind of an unexpected purchase, so this tv would fit my budget just wondering if its decent.
stevew
01-31-2013, 11:05 PM
Everything is basically good now.
Alan T
02-01-2013, 05:13 AM
Anybody have any experience with the VIZO 47 inch lcd 3d tv? it's only like 500 or 600 bucks at walmart and my tv just died...It uses the regular theatre 3d glasses. Thinking about picking it up tomorrow after work...I really don't wanna spend much over 600 at this point as its kind of an unexpected purchase, so this tv would fit my budget just wondering if its decent.
I got it for my kids for Christmas since they are huge into the 3d disney movies right now. I could care less about 3d myself, but they think it is great. It does not have the same HD quality as my LG tvs on non-3d stuff, but it really is not that bad at all. I find the picture a little darker, but once again not a big deal to me. The 3d stuff all works fine, the kids love it and it is really nice that it came with 2 pair of 3d glasses, and we just got 4 more pairs from the local theater after watching some movie there.
So not the TV that I choose to watch every day, but my kids prefer it over the other tvs in the house. Not a bad deal when I got it for like $530 I think.
IlliniCub
02-01-2013, 05:02 PM
Thanks a lot...I'm dealing with a 4 year old dynex 1080p so I'm sure the picture quality will be better than that for sure I would think
finketr
02-01-2013, 05:43 PM
i still have my crt TV.. kinda wish that damn thing ould die so we can go buy a new tv that we want but don't want to pay for. :)
IlliniCub
02-02-2013, 09:55 PM
Ended up going to sears and saw that LG's 47 inch 3d tv was on sale and only 50 more than the Vizio one....so I picked it up instead seems really nice so far!
Lathum
04-22-2013, 02:42 PM
anyone ever do wireless HDMI? Thinking about trying this since the end of my HDMI cable snapped off and I really don't want to pay to wire a new one through the wall.
Amazon.com: Atlona AT-LINKCASTAV LinkCast Wireless HD Audio/Video Station: Electronics (http://www.amazon.com/Atlona-AT-LINKCASTAV-LinkCast-Wireless-Station/dp/B006V5YZKO/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top)
cartman
04-22-2013, 02:48 PM
anyone ever do wireless HDMI? Thinking about trying this since the end of my HDMI cable snapped off and I really don't want to pay to wire a new one through the wall.
Amazon.com: Atlona AT-LINKCASTAV LinkCast Wireless HD Audio/Video Station: Electronics (http://www.amazon.com/Atlona-AT-LINKCASTAV-LinkCast-Wireless-Station/dp/B006V5YZKO/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top)
I'd be concerned a bit about delay, as that is a problem with wireless speakers.
How long is the cable run with the broken end? If you can tug on one end and have the other end move, you might be able to buy a new cable, tape it to the broken end, and pull the new cable through.
Lathum
04-22-2013, 02:54 PM
I'd be concerned a bit about delay, as that is a problem with wireless speakers.
How long is the cable run with the broken end? If you can tug on one end and have the other end move, you might be able to buy a new cable, tape it to the broken end, and pull the new cable through.
First thing I thought of. The problem is the cable was installed before the drywall was put up so it is stapled to all the oards in the wall. I called the guy who did the install and this was what he recommended.
cartman
04-22-2013, 02:59 PM
D'oh, that sucks. In any event, it probably is still cheaper to run a new cable than to buy one of those devices.
sterlingice
11-22-2014, 12:44 PM
There may be one, but I can't find a newer thread so I'm just going to hit this here. I love my old 42" Panasonic plasma (watching Matrix:Reloaded or Dark Knight on that thing was amazing) but it's over 5 years old now and starting to bleed colors a little so it's time for that to become the bedroom tv.
I'm looking to buy a tv in the $700 or less range, around 50" or, preferably 55" in the next month or two. I don't really care about "smartness" as I have a BluRay player that has all of that covered so ideally, I'd rather pay more for better picture quality. However, I'm looking for sweet spot: if there's one with a good picture for $550 or one that's slightly better at $700, I'd take the $550 because of diminishing returns. But if it would only cost another $50 to get "smart" features, I'd probably pay for the $600 just so I would save on having to buy another BluRay player.
There seem to be a couple of different of technologies out there but it seems like some sort of LED is best. In a store, I don't really see a big difference with 4K unless I stand up close and it's out of my price range vs value at this point. I do like the difference in 120Hz vs 60Hz so I'm pretty set on 120Hz but I'm "meh" on 240. Also, I hear that IPS is a better display than TN but how much better?
Lastly, there's 3D. I'm on the fence there and this is probably the only tv I'm going to buy for the next 5 years. It seems like a dead technology to me but if I'm misreading that, I'd pay a bit of a premium to get it now. My BluRay (it's a Sony S5100) supports 3D so I'm set infrastructure-wise.
So, any thoughts, models? So far, I've liked the Samsung UN55H6350 pretty well but it hasn't quite fallen into that range. It hangs out around $800+ and you're paying for some smart features and design I don't care about. I've also liked the LG 55LB6300 but it also hangs out around $900. Same thing- more features than I need but I feel like that's the really crisp picture quality range that is noticeable to me. So I feel like I have to pay an extra $200-$300 for features I don't like to get the picture quality I enjoy. If there's a screen out there that's in the similar range but not smart and costs $250 less, I'd be all over that (please tell me there is!)
Also, when is the best time to get them? When do next year's models come out so I can get a bargain? If it's January or February, maybe I'll wait. But if not, now's as good a time as any and I'd like to get this taken care of because we're also going to be car shopping soon (sigh- that's for another thread)
SI
weegeebored
11-23-2014, 09:22 AM
I think that you've got a lot of parameters that are difficult to achieve, especially if you need a 55". The LG model that you listed is <$800 in a 50-inch model. Features aside, I don't think that your going to get the PQ you want at that price point. Then again, PQ is in the eye of the beholder. That's the only real explanation for why people choose LCD/LED televisions over plasma (may it rest in peace). Maybe a Vizio E500i 55-inch would work for you?
sterlingice
11-23-2014, 10:36 AM
I've seen the 55LB6300 and UN55H6350 both drop below the $800 mark and both are even there right now. I'm trying to decide if I should pull the trigger or wait. I'm also going to go check both out in store one last time today to see if I have a significant preference one way or another. I also have a couple of Vizio models to check out. There's also the little brothers of each of the above models in the 55LB5900 and UN55H6203, which have worse chassis design and software but also are $200 less. I'm going to have to see if I would even get $200 more out of the better tvs for my viewing. I could also drop down to 50" for either of the 6300/6350 and end up in the $650 range.
SI
weegeebored
11-23-2014, 11:12 AM
Yeah it's a good idea to check them out if you can. Your eyes will tell you mostly what you need to know. You could try Rtings.com - Find your TV (http://www.rtings.com) for reviews. I like that they post some somewhat objective results like contrast and black/gray uniformity ratings. FWIW, Consumer Reports rated the LG at 67 and the 50" Samsung model at 68 (74 is high score). My understanding is that LGs tend to have a larger viewing angle before PQ goes significantly down if that's important to you.
I've been doing a lot of research lately as I'm looking to replace a very small LCD set. I didn't pull the trigger fast enough on the Samsung F8500 plasma that I wanted, so now looking at the LEDs. I can't wait until the OLEDs to get better and cheaper.
MizzouRah
11-23-2014, 12:27 PM
The greatest TV I have ever owned is this $499 52" Sceptre from Walmart. Much better than that piece of crap 46" Sony I paid $2100 for that went in the garbage after 3+ years.
Expensive TV's are so overrated.
CU Tiger
11-23-2014, 07:00 PM
If I was looking at a $700 TV today I'd buy this:
Samsung 60" Class (59.9" Diag.) 1080p Plasma HDTV PN60F5350BFXZA (http://www.costco.com/Samsung-60%22-Class-(59.9%22-Diag.)-1080p-Plasma-HDTV-PN60F5350BFXZA.product.100110098.html)
Its not Panny Plasma good...but its close.
I helped a friend set-up this model a week ago. After we hacked in and played with some "technician" settings this was a $1,000 TV quality picture.
CU Tiger
11-23-2014, 07:02 PM
I'm not a Vizio fan and I've expressed that before (though I did recently buy a vizio sound bar for the man cave and have been happy)
But for $530 this specs well though I havent touched one in person.
Desnudo
11-23-2014, 07:11 PM
I've seen the 55LB6300 and UN55H6350 both drop below the $800 mark and both are even there right now. I'm trying to decide if I should pull the trigger or wait. I'm also going to go check both out in store one last time today to see if I have a significant preference one way or another. I also have a couple of Vizio models to check out. There's also the little brothers of each of the above models in the 55LB5900 and UN55H6203, which have worse chassis design and software but also are $200 less. I'm going to have to see if I would even get $200 more out of the better tvs for my viewing. I could also drop down to 50" for either of the 6300/6350 and end up in the $650 range.
SI
Costco has the LG 55" 55LB6100 for $679 after a $120 mfg discount. I have no idea what the model difference is.
LG 55" Class 1080p 120Hz Smart LED HDTV 55LB6100 (http://www.costco.com/.product.100107653.html?catalogId=10701&langId=-1&storeId=10301&krypto=6jlX5AArtJ2rDlirFXt4W17D7GjLpBjK2WXJUTe7JzHJb4SMj3AMm3LakocAOWUmWQKQnzKUzIau%0AjVfrqbbCIF6Am5aYnEW0D5%2FNexc11xo%2Fio7cwHkI%2B1BoHpU2uLS1Gl6cNRGUD66QElKimYGs7Dpq%0AXIme4vLhTmieePhOw9c2FgMkcup7YdjpiP86PJyXQppNaF495Jn8eW2j16HHhLacRZAxjUm2DKhZ%0AARGnoJW9Hnz3UhDgVEAUeZM3wmhXHwDda%2FkAYcdNUk8AKL4j%2BTn7Gz5QItVMovMVm0mD4j6MtHn3%0AmlfZi1puMLT9iEmR%2BPSRhaqtXCF9fXTTUF91FA%3D%3D)
Autumn
05-02-2015, 07:26 AM
Wow, I feel like I used to see this thread on the first page every day, but it took me 12 pages to dig back and find it now that I need it!
Let me set the stage: I have an regular 30 something inch old-school TV (non flat screen, whatever that is called) that I got from someone for free years ago. The one and only time I ever bought a TV was about 12 years ago and I spent about $200. I am, I suppose you could say, a budget shopper. I am not looking for cutting edge and hate to have to spend anything.
That said, I would like to get a new TV. I don't like to spend money, but when I do I want something of decent quality. A friend of mine has a large TV, I'm not sure what kind, and I really, really hate it. Everything looks really cheap on it, like it's a bad SyFy Channel show or something, and so I really want to avoid getting something like that.
Anything I buy will seem really big to me, and I don't need any fancy features (Justhaving a HDMI input will be a big step up for me) and I want to not spend a lot of money. What type of TV should I be looking at, as in format/technology? Is there a particular brand I should look at?
Edward64
05-02-2015, 07:39 AM
Wow, I feel like I used to see this thread on the first page every day, but it took me 12 pages to dig back and find it now that I need it!
Let me set the stage: I have an regular 30 something inch old-school TV (non flat screen, whatever that is called) that I got from someone for free years ago. The one and only time I ever bought a TV was about 12 years ago and I spent about $200. I am, I suppose you could say, a budget shopper. I am not looking for cutting edge and hate to have to spend anything.
That said, I would like to get a new TV. I don't like to spend money, but when I do I want something of decent quality. A friend of mine has a large TV, I'm not sure what kind, and I really, really hate it. Everything looks really cheap on it, like it's a bad SyFy Channel show or something, and so I really want to avoid getting something like that.
Anything I buy will seem really big to me, and I don't need any fancy features (Justhaving a HDMI input will be a big step up for me) and I want to not spend a lot of money. What type of TV should I be looking at, as in format/technology? Is there a particular brand I should look at?
I'm not an expert and will defer to someone else on the board who is. My take is any lcd tv is better than what you have (e.g. Target has nice prices). The key is not the tv but the signal it is getting from your cable company.
Autumn
05-02-2015, 07:49 AM
Oh right, I should mention that we don't have cable, or Bluray, we just watch DVDs, kids use the Wii, and then we use Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime for video watching.
Autumn
05-02-2015, 08:51 AM
Ah, this is what bugs me about my friend's TV. Good to know it's a thing. What is the 'Soap Opera Effect'? - CNET (http://www.cnet.com/news/what-is-the-soap-opera-effect/)
CU Tiger
05-02-2015, 08:56 AM
As a rule you should turn off an disable all "beneficial effects"
Motion Blur
Image Stabilization
Anti-Washout
Visual Boise Reduction
Ive never seen any of them that actually improved the picture EXCEPT in very specific video sequences developed for marketing purposes.
Mizzou B-ball fan
07-02-2015, 09:36 AM
Is it just me or have these 4K TV's gone down in price in a BIG hurry? $298 for a 42" 4K TV? That's just insane.
Seiki 42" 4K Ultra HD TV | hhgregg (http://www.hhgregg.com/seiki-42-4k-ultra-hd-tv/item/SE42UM)
lungs
07-02-2015, 10:00 AM
Any opinions on the Sharp Aquos Q+?
I want an 80 incher in my new house and this (http://www.sharpusa.com/ForHome/HomeEntertainment/LCDTV/Models/LC80UQ17U.aspx) one kind of caught my eye.
NobodyHere
07-02-2015, 10:01 AM
how much content is there for 4k TVs these days?
Edward64
07-03-2015, 08:15 AM
Was at Best Buy the other day and wife was asking where we would hang a 65-70' TV. A good sign that I'm going to get my 4K this year!
With limited 4K content, upscaling is going to be important. Does anyone have any perspective if upscaling differences are significant and which brands do the best job?
weegeebored
07-03-2015, 05:53 PM
I think it's a no-brainer to stay with either a Samsung or Sony in terms of quality 4K. Personally, I don't see much of a difference between 4K and HD but some people do (like my wife). I have a Sony XBR850b -- upscales fine, color is great, but it's not better than my Panny plasma. (Again, my wife would argue that the PQ on the Sony is.)
Best thing to do is see them with your own eyes although that's not always going to be easy. The HH Gregg store here splits a cable feed for live tv so all of the TVs look pretty crappy. They will run 1080p demos off a flash drive to get a better picture. The BB uses canned demos so I guess it's a fair comparison to all TVs in the store, but not necessarily what you'll see at home.
Good luck with your purchase.
stevew
07-03-2015, 06:41 PM
While I love the curved Samsung set, I do feel like 60"+ in any reasonable brand is going to be great.
Mizzou B-ball fan
07-04-2015, 12:06 PM
how much content is there for 4k TVs these days?
Netflix.
BillJasper
07-04-2015, 12:47 PM
I have a 4K Vizio 50" TV. I love it. There's some 4K material on Netflix, but not much. It seems to have a decent upscaler.
cougarfreak
07-04-2015, 03:38 PM
I'm thinking about pulling the trigger on a 55-60" 1080p in the next few weeks. They've gotten pretty damn cheap.
cougarfreak
07-05-2015, 01:15 PM
Ended up with this:
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/samsung-55-class-54-6-diag--led-2160p-smart-4k-ultra-hd-tv-black/3953148.p?id=1219609307256&skuId=3953148
Included a free soundbar at the $1099 price.
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/samsung-500-series-2-1-channel-soundbar-with-7-wireless-active-subwoofer-black/3457016.p?id=1219582883603&skuId=3457016
stevew
07-06-2015, 12:19 AM
That's a lot of TV for the price.
cougarfreak
07-06-2015, 07:25 AM
That's a lot of TV for the price.
I was at the store, and debated. Went home, to check some online stuff, because I really went in set on a 1080P. When I looked after I got home, and saw I got the wireless soundbar for free (it's list is $349, was on sale for $299) I thought it was a hell of a deal. I know it's not some theater quality sound system, but it's good enough for me. Auto connected with the TV in a snap.
bhlloy
11-25-2015, 07:42 PM
So we have some smart people on this board that have some really good knowledge of TV's and cable/satellite, shot in the dark that maybe somebody can tell me what's going on here. We moved over the weekend and bought a new Samsung 4k TV (not top of the line, but middling and got a really good deal from Fry's on it). DirectTV guy didn't come until Wednesday so we hooked our 5/6year old (what I believe was) 1080i DirectTV box up to it and it looked pretty damn good. I was perfectly happy with the picture and it was already an upgrade over the old TV I had.
Fast forward to today, the guy comes out with a brand new genie box (which in theory is 4k although hasn't been hooked up) and gets everything set up. The picture is noticably worse, far more grainy and colors are washed out. I was expecting this to be an upgrade even without the 4k as it would be a far newer box and native 1080p from what I understand, but it looks like garbage.
I don't think the guy played with the picture settings on the TV at all (and none of the presets look good anyway, so I don't think it's the TV that's the problem) - anything obvious I should check with regards to the DirectTV settings or hookups? Is this because I now have a 4k enabled box without the 4k? I played with the basic DirectTV settings through the menu and seems pretty limited.
BillJasper
11-25-2015, 07:44 PM
So we have some smart people on this board that have some really good knowledge of TV's and cable/satellite, shot in the dark that maybe somebody can tell me what's going on here. We moved over the weekend and bought a new Samsung 4k TV (not top of the line, but middling and got a really good deal from Fry's on it). DirectTV guy didn't come until Wednesday so we hooked our 5/6year old (what I believe was) 1080i DirectTV box up to it and it looked pretty damn good. I was perfectly happy with the picture and it was already an upgrade over the old TV I had.
Fast forward to today, the guy comes out with a brand new genie box (which in theory is 4k although hasn't been hooked up) and gets everything set up. The picture is noticably worse, far more grainy and colors are washed out. I was expecting this to be an upgrade even without the 4k as it would be a far newer box and native 1080p from what I understand, but it looks like garbage.
I don't think the guy played with the picture settings on the TV at all (and none of the presets look good anyway, so I don't think it's the TV that's the problem) - anything obvious I should check with regards to the DirectTV settings or hookups? Is this because I now have a 4k enabled box without the 4k? I played with the basic DirectTV settings through the menu and seems pretty limited.
Does the new box have a 1080i setting you can try? No cable/OTA content is 1080p that I'm aware of.
cartman
11-25-2015, 08:09 PM
The 4K via the Genie is only for certain PPV movies. Everything else is still 1080. I'd check the output settings on the Genie box, it probably isn't set to 1080i.
edit: I just looked at mine, and I have the 1080p and 1080i as the only resolutions with a check mark. If you have those checked, as well as the lower resolutions, uncheck the lower resolutions.
rowech
11-25-2015, 08:52 PM
So I've been reading more about 4K not being worth it for a variety of reasons. Agree or disagree?
stevew
11-25-2015, 08:56 PM
It's probably set to 480p. Look at the front right lights there. They have the resolution listed.
cartman
11-25-2015, 08:59 PM
So I've been reading more about 4K not being worth it for a variety of reasons. Agree or disagree?
Not much content yet, and what content is out there, competing standards exist.
MizzouRah
11-25-2015, 09:09 PM
You can have 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p all checked and it will pick the best one due to what you are watching. Like some have said, you probably only have 480p checked.
bhlloy
11-25-2015, 09:24 PM
No, I had them all checked. Factory reset seems to have done the trick, not sure what the deal was.
Kodos
11-25-2015, 09:25 PM
That would be my guess too.
Julio Riddols
11-26-2015, 05:37 PM
We picked up the 65" LG 4k that was selling for 900. Pretty stoked to have that upgrade over our old plasma with the ESPN bottom line still burned into the screen.
Dutch
11-26-2015, 07:43 PM
Thus basically my knowledge of TVs. "Does it cost between $800-$1200?". If the answer is yes...sold!
Mizzou B-ball fan
01-26-2016, 11:03 AM
Finally got our basement finished to the point where I could do a size check on my new projector that I bought. It's an Optima GT 1080p 3D DLP Gaming Projector. I got it on sale for around $600 shipped. In the photo below, it's on the ground, but I'll just flip it and mount it on the ceiling for final install. It's a VERY light projector, so it's going to be an easy mount. I have the plug-in/HDMI installed in the ceiling only five feet from the wall.
The test image on the wall is 11 feet across by 6 1/2 feet high and it's projected on the grey paint (I bought Goo Systems paint to use for the projector screen for around $200) . I love the fact that the projector will be close to the wall (don't have to worry about people walking through the projector like if it were 10-15 feet from the wall). The amazing part is the price of my entire setup. I'm basically going to spend around $1400 and have a 3D 1080p setup with sound bar/woofer/wireless rear speakers and a PS4. That's a great value for that price.
https://scontent-ord1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xft1/v/t1.0-9/12592346_10205475200541894_6127253733402728455_n.jpg?oh=4aeb38254f2f582dcd93fb87b07d1b8f&oe=5733A5AB
Dutch
01-26-2016, 11:30 AM
Awesome. Maybe one day I'll be able to do something like that.
Kodos
06-02-2016, 02:11 PM
So I guess plasma TVs are extinct now?
Edward64
06-02-2016, 02:19 PM
I think so.
Enjoying my LG 65" 4K. Hoping to pick up 75"+ this BF if prices come down enough.
weegeebored
06-02-2016, 05:29 PM
So I guess plasma TVs are extinct now?Yes. Consumers didn't want them anymore for some reason. The average person probably couldn't tell the difference between a plasma and LCD, and LCDs sold better so kind of a no-brainer for the manufacturers. IMO more good things about plasma than bad, especially the black levels on a nice set. The next great tv will be OLED. Looking forward to those. I still love my Panasonic plasma and my wife loves her Sony UHD so we're good for now.
SteveMax58
06-02-2016, 05:55 PM
So I guess plasma TVs are extinct now?
Yes, sadly.
A casualty of energy efficiency coupled with the lower cost of LCD panels.
The closest you can get is now OLED. Prices were still substantially higher than LED last I checked. But that's about the best picture you can get any more.
SteveMax58
06-02-2016, 05:58 PM
Yes. Consumers didn't want them anymore for some reason. The average person probably couldn't tell the difference between a plasma and LCD, and LCDs sold better so kind of a no-brainer for the manufacturers. IMO more good things about plasma than bad, especially the black levels on a nice set. The next great tv will be OLED. Looking forward to those. I still love my Panasonic plasma and my wife loves her Sony UHD so we're good for now.
Yeah the newer LEDs with local dimming are solid. But still not plasma quality. My 6 year Samsung plasma is still better than anything else short of OLED. And even then.....it's a toss up.
PilotMan
06-20-2016, 06:07 PM
Looking for a cheap TV for my basement TV for the kids and whoever. I had heard some good comments from here on the Sceptre Walmart TVs. So what do you think of this option?
Sceptre E555BV-F 55" 1080p 60Hz Class LED HDTV - Walmart.com (http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sceptre-E555BV-F-55-1080p-60Hz-Class-LED-HDTV/19527757)
MizzouRah
06-20-2016, 06:15 PM
Looking for a cheap TV for my basement TV for the kids and whoever. I had heard some good comments from here on the Sceptre Walmart TVs. So what do you think of this option?
Sceptre E555BV-F 55" 1080p 60Hz Class LED HDTV - Walmart.com (http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sceptre-E555BV-F-55-1080p-60Hz-Class-LED-HDTV/19527757)
Heck of a price.. most of the reviews are good. We love our Sceptre.
Mizzou B-ball fan
10-25-2016, 12:19 PM
Ridiculous deal on a 4K TV. $418 with in-store pickup.
Target : Expect More. Pay Less. (http://www.target.com/p/tcl-55-4k-ultra-hd-2160p-120hz-roku-smart-led-tv-black-55us5800-/-/A-50480469?clkid=63c6945bNcf1d29c7864d28708e700ee6&lnm=81938&afid=Skimbit+Ltd.&ref=tgt_adv_xasd0002)
Suicane75
10-25-2016, 05:58 PM
Love the TCL Roku TV's. I got a 32' for my room last year and have since bought two more.
RainMaker
10-25-2016, 06:27 PM
I've held off on a 4k TV but am getting really tempted.
miked
12-27-2016, 04:20 PM
So my 46" Sharp Aquos just died, got it like 8-9 years ago and now I need a replacement. Any good deals or crazy things I need to know? Don't watch anything crazy, just mostly use it for sports and movies (and we have a Wii).
miked
12-27-2016, 04:33 PM
And I'm old and don't understand this curved TV thing. Are the curved ones better?
cartman
12-27-2016, 04:35 PM
This has a pretty good PROs and CONs. The big CON to me is that there is a limited viewing angle, ie. sweet spot, so if you have to sit off to the side, the picture doesn't look right.
Curved TVs: The Pros and Cons (http://www.trustedreviews.com/opinions/curved-tvs-the-pros-and-cons)
SteveMax58
12-27-2016, 04:48 PM
And I'm old and don't understand this curved TV thing. Are the curved ones better?
Short answer...they suck unless you buy one the size of an entire wall.
CU Tiger
12-28-2016, 11:39 AM
For a living space curved sucks.
For a dedicated theater room or if you are single or MNK and ONLY watch TV from one spot they are ok, but they still screw with my eyes.
If I had to buy a TV today, I wouldnt buy anything that wasn't Organic LED driven.
AlexB
01-14-2017, 04:44 PM
Bought myself a Samsung UE43KS7500 on New Years Eve, and was really disappointed in the picture: news channels scrolling text was really juddery, and sports had moments where the picture sort of froze for an instant, then seemed to fats forward for a split second to catch up again. Couldn't get this to stop whether I set the TV to filter lots, filter nothing, changed sharpness, nothing worked.
Then today I found an article that solved all my issues: my TV is through a satellite box, and all I had to do was change the HD resolution output from 1020i to 720p and with a bit of tweaking on the contrast, brightness, I have the picture I thought I was buying, with no judder or problems with scrolling text.
It was an expensive buy for me, and I am both so relieved and so happy right now!
CrescentMoonie
07-31-2017, 09:56 PM
So...should I be looking for OLED? If so, what are the other big things for a TV now? It's a living room TV for my parents, probably of the 55" variety or a little bigger, and they mostly watch TV/DVR but I am getting them an UltraHD Blu Ray player for Christmas.
weegeebored
07-31-2017, 10:32 PM
What's your price point?
CrescentMoonie
07-31-2017, 10:35 PM
I'm thinking around $3000. The B series LG OLEDs are starting to hit that level and they're supposedly pretty good. If there's something comparable, or if it's smarter to wait on OLED and go with something else at this time, I'm open to all suggestions. It's been quite a while since I've even thought about anything other than a budget TV.
Honolulu_Blue
08-01-2017, 10:06 AM
I'm thinking around $3000. The B series LG OLEDs are starting to hit that level and they're supposedly pretty good. If there's something comparable, or if it's smarter to wait on OLED and go with something else at this time, I'm open to all suggestions. It's been quite a while since I've even thought about anything other than a budget TV.
I bought this OLED TV back in February:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01CDF9S1G/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Based on the few sites I went to and reviews I read it was the highest rated TV available.
It did not disappoint. It's an amazing TV. It's a big step up from other HD TVs. Sometimes it's almost distracting how clear and real things look. I highly recommend this.
CrescentMoonie
08-01-2017, 10:49 AM
I bought this OLED TV back in February:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01CDF9S1G/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Based on the few sites I went to and reviews I read it was the highest rated TV available.
It did not disappoint. It's an amazing TV. It's a big step up from other HD TVs. Sometimes it's almost distracting how clear and real things look. I highly recommend this.
Thanks. The LG B6 models are still top 10 rated by several sites. I haven't seen ratings on the B7 models, but Costco has those for $200 more right now.
Do you turn it down to 720p for regular TV and use the full ability for Blu-Ray, etc. or just let it run at its best level all the time?
bhlloy
08-01-2017, 10:56 AM
Does anyone have any experience buying an outdoor TV? Do I need to spend the extra 200 or 400% for the outdoor models from someone like SunBrite or can I get away with a regular model?
It will be in a partially shaded area but we'd like to be able to view it from the pool which is fully open to the sun
Honolulu_Blue
08-01-2017, 11:26 AM
Thanks. The LG B6 models are still top 10 rated by several sites. I haven't seen ratings on the B7 models, but Costco has those for $200 more right now.
Do you turn it down to 720p for regular TV and use the full ability for Blu-Ray, etc. or just let it run at its best level all the time?
I just let it run whatever it wants to run at. The quality has been great for everything - 4K Roku, 4k Amazon, regular cable box HD, which is likey 720p.
Well, not everything. If there is the off chance that you ever watch a SD station, forget it. It looks awful on this TV.
I really couldn't be happier with the purchase of this TV. It wasn't cheap, but I definitely feel like it was worth the money.
weegeebored
08-01-2017, 02:21 PM
I'm thinking around $3000. The B series LG OLEDs are starting to hit that level and they're supposedly pretty good. If there's something comparable, or if it's smarter to wait on OLED and go with something else at this time, I'm open to all suggestions. It's been quite a while since I've even thought about anything other than a budget TV.Like with any technology, the longer you wait inevitably something better will come out or price will be cheaper. With that kind of money right now I would go with an OLED, and probably opt for the LG C7 series. Many reviews don't think there's much difference between the C7 and B6 so if you can see them yourself somewhere it might help in your decision.
CrescentMoonie
08-01-2017, 03:09 PM
Like with any technology, the longer you wait inevitably something better will come out or price will be cheaper. With that kind of money right now I would go with an OLED, and probably opt for the LG C7 series. Many reviews don't think there's much difference between the C7 and B6 so if you can see them yourself somewhere it might help in your decision.
Costco is carrying what looks like the B7 series, so I'm thinking that might work.
stevew
08-01-2017, 04:56 PM
Does anyone have any experience buying an outdoor TV? Do I need to spend the extra 200 or 400% for the outdoor models from someone like SunBrite or can I get away with a regular model?
It will be in a partially shaded area but we'd like to be able to view it from the pool which is fully open to the sun
Seems like a good question. I know those are so damn expensive. I'd be tempted to try something lightweight and cheap with a cover before dropping an insane amount of cash, but obviously a YMMV type situation.
INDalltheway
08-01-2017, 06:53 PM
So...should I be looking for OLED? If so, what are the other big things for a TV now? It's a living room TV for my parents, probably of the 55" variety or a little bigger, and they mostly watch TV/DVR but I am getting them an UltraHD Blu Ray player for Christmas.
LG OLED55B6P - you can find this model on eBay from reputable sellers for around $1500 (and no sales tax) from time to time. I have this TV and it's a great TV.
Kodos
09-15-2018, 09:24 PM
Apparently it is about impossible to find a non-SMART TV these days. Thinking about dipping my toes in the 4K era. Maybe this one in 55 inch size. Anyone have thoughts on it?
Amazon.com: Samsung QN55Q6F Flat 55” QLED 4K UHD 6 Series Smart TV 2018: Electronics (https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07BKK4NTS/?coliid=I2DPD0ZIT0QY95&colid=V26T9RS8YNLR&psc=0&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it)
INDalltheway
09-15-2018, 09:57 PM
Apparently it is about impossible to find a non-SMART TV these days. Thinking about dipping my toes in the 4K era. Maybe this one in 55 inch size. Anyone have thoughts on it?
Amazon.com: Samsung QN55Q6F Flat 55” QLED 4K UHD 6 Series Smart TV 2018: Electronics (https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07BKK4NTS/?coliid=I2DPD0ZIT0QY95&colid=V26T9RS8YNLR&psc=0&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it)
Pretty decent review with my favorite TV review site - https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/samsung/q6fn-q6f-q6-2018
Kodos
09-16-2018, 02:35 PM
Nice review. Thanks. They certainly go in depth.
IlliniCub
03-25-2020, 10:49 PM
I currently have a 65 inch A9f Sony Oled. For general viewing I have a 75 inch vizio quantum x which is also amazing. Anyway, I was curious if any of you guys that have had OLEDs longer than me have experienced burn in with sports or general TV. I tend to really baby my OLED.
Edward64
07-22-2020, 06:03 AM
98-inch TV for $3,000.
Yeah, I know we are in an economic/technological war with China and there's probably some sort of backdoor in their firmware so they can spy on me, but I'd buy this over a Peloton.
Xiaomi has the 98-inch Redmi Smart TV Max back at a pre-sale price of 19,999 yuan (US$2,855) - NotebookCheck.net News (https://www.notebookcheck.net/Xiaomi-has-the-98-inch-Redmi-Smart-TV-Max-back-at-a-pre-sale-price-of-19-999-yuan-US-2-855.482596.0.html)
The smart TV that’s bigger than a single bed is back as Xiaomi has announced the 98-inch Redmi Smart TV Max is now available for a pre-sale price of 19,999 yuan (US$2,855),
:
:
The 98-inch Redmi Smart TV Max has a lot to offer for its 19,999 yuan, which is a very fair price for the features it has and in comparison with the price tags of devices from premium-branded opposition (Sony, Philips, etc.). There are smart TVs of this size for sale at prices that rocket past 100,000 yuan (US$14,285) in China, so it’s easy to see why the Redmi Max 98 keeps getting snapped up every time it goes on sale, based on its price point alone.
But the Redmi Smart TV Max doesn’t just have an attractive price tag. The 4K smart TV utilizes MEMC technology for smoother images, it covers 85% of the NTSC color gamut, contains a 12nm custom quad-core processor, offers 4 GB RAM and 64 GB storage, and it can boast of voice-activated remote control. Unfortunately, Xiaomi hasn’t launched the 98-inch Redmi Smart TV Max in other markets outside of China yet, but hopefully the company will as it is more than likely the 98-incher will become a favorite with shoppers looking for an affordable smart TV that’s larger than their bed.
And wanted to revive this thread because my daughter will be off to college and I can now reclaim the basement "media" room and make it my man cave.
Amazon.com: SAMSUNG 85-inch Class QLED Q900T Series - Real 8K Resolution Direct Full Array 32X Quantum HDR 32X Smart TV with Alexa Built-in (QN85Q900TSFXZA, 2020 Model): Electronics (https://www.amazon.com/SAMSUNG-85-inch-Class-Q900T-Built/dp/B08592BWFG/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&fst=as%3Aoff&qid=1595419203&refinements=p_n_feature_nine_browse-bin%3A21103541011%2Cp_n_condition-type%3A2224371011&rnid=2224369011&s=electronics&sr=1-5)
Scarecrow
07-23-2020, 10:28 AM
Interesting that this thread popped up. Finally broke down and got a new TV. Will be here tomorrow and I'll post an update/review...
Samsung 65" The Frame QLED (2020) (https://www.samsung.com/us/televisions-home-theater/tvs/the-frame/65-class-the-frame-tv-qled-4k-uhd-hdr-smart-tv-2020-qn65ls03tafxza/)
Kodos
07-23-2020, 10:39 AM
Just got one of these. Very happy so far. And it will be ready for the PS5 and new Xbox.
Sony X900H 4K HDR TV review | Stunning Value | Digital Trends (https://www.digitaltrends.com/tv-reviews/sony-x900h-4k-hdr-tv-review/)
This year, the X900H adds a bonus. The set offers (or will soon offer, rather) features that none of its other TVs will this year — Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), especially appealing to gamers. If you want a Sony, and you want the best gaming experience, especially with next-generation consoles like Sony’s PlayStation 5 and Microsoft’s Xbox Series X, this is the TV to buy.
ISiddiqui
07-23-2020, 10:47 AM
I currently have a 65 inch A9f Sony Oled. For general viewing I have a 75 inch vizio quantum x which is also amazing. Anyway, I was curious if any of you guys that have had OLEDs longer than me have experienced burn in with sports or general TV. I tend to really baby my OLED.
I have a 2017 LG B7 OLED. I haven't experienced any burn in. I just passed 4,000 hours on my TV.
Edward64
09-06-2020, 09:20 AM
Checking around the bestbuy site and saw a couple LG 85+ inch TVs < $2K. Anyone have a large 85 inch and is worth it over today's standard of 65 or 75 inch TVs?
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