SHARP 52" 120hz $898, 42" 60hz $498

sivart

Golden Member
Oct 20, 2000
1,786
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None left in my stores at 9:30AM yesterday. This started at 5AM Saturday and each store probably only have a handful...good luck you aren't going to fine one.

Plus examining these Sharp's in Sam's Club reveals that their off angle viewing sucks...even the "lower" end Vizio's off angle viewing was 100x better.
 

tomatom

Senior member
Jul 27, 2002
331
0
0
" Don't ever buy electronics from walmart. Ever "

WOW , important consumer warning !?

...but , ANANDTECH Members are very sophisticated and

usually expect adequate justification , sources , and

documentation for similar posts .

... Otherwise , they may be viewed as unwelcomed

mudslinging ...
 

mvbighead

Diamond Member
Apr 20, 2009
3,793
1
81
Funny, Walmart has a pretty easy return policy if the product is lame. Had a device, lost the receipt, and they still provided refund. Yeah, gotta watch out for Walmart... they're pretty sneaky!

I find it best to purchase major electronics from local brick and mortars (walmart included) as dealing with returns and online vendors is usually never a fun ordeal. But as far as the TV goes, get the best price, ensure the return policy is good, and buy there... I've never had a problem with numerous items I've purchased at walmart.
 

Unmoosical

Senior member
Feb 27, 2006
372
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0
http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?t=41823

That might be what he meant, I've heard the same thing.

I'd like to hear more about that. Most of the people in that forum are saying, "I've heard the same thing."

To prove my point, Did you hear that Glenn Beck raped and killed a girl?.........:rolleyes:

Like I said, I'd like to know if it's true or not but a group of people all saying "I've heard that from someone too" isn't that convincing.
 

GprophetB

Platinum Member
Jun 20, 2003
2,632
0
76
For what its worth, last year during BF SEARS had a specific model of TV (I beleive it was sharp or samsung) That i confirmed with a sales rep was only available at SEARS.

Now does this mean it was ONLY made for sears with cheaper / less components... i don't know.

Just my 2c and i wouldn't be surprised if huge retailers make behind the scene deals with these companies of this nature.
 

SearchMaster

Diamond Member
Jun 6, 2002
7,791
114
106
There are a lot of times that a particular model is specific to a particular chain store. This is to prevent price-matching.

If Walmart offers the GZ485-W at $500 and Best Buy offers the GZ485-B at $800, Best Buy won't price match because the models are different, even if the underlying devices are exactly the same.

My understanding is that sometimes there are minor differences (external appearance, maybe even menu differences on TVs, etc.) but it doesn't mean the Walmart or Best Buy versions are inferior or superior to each other.
 

DrunkenSano

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2008
3,892
490
126
Sometimes, it's the same TV but just a unique model number for that company. The big reason is that this gives their company and other companies a loophole where they don't have to price match since it's a "different" model.
 

mvbighead

Diamond Member
Apr 20, 2009
3,793
1
81
Yeah, after hearing the price-matching stuff, I'd say it is pretty easy to see that Walmart isn't the only company doing this. Furthermore, whether Sharp, Samsung, LG, etc., the company will still have to stand behind their product. If I am Samsung (who seemed to be renowned for making some of the better TVs out there), I sure as crap won't give Walmart a product that has inferior parts that will break in less than 2 years, as my brand would look bad with hundreds upon hundreds of reports of defective TVs that are less than 2 years old. My 2 cents.
 

Gibson486

Lifer
Aug 9, 2000
18,378
2
0
Well...here is how it happened when I used to work in the electronics field....

When the product goes out the door after launch, the design still goes on. The difference is that the engineering is not really done by R&D anymore. It's by a sustainable engineering group or something similiar. Whatever the names is, you get the point. What this engineering group does is take the existing design and make it better/cheaper or they fix things that consumers complain about. It could be something as simple as getting the same capacitor from a different vendor but at half the price or something as big as changing a circuit board design to a cheaper solution (because of cheaper parts or even because the intial design was flawed or not as good). In the speaker industry, it could be changing the driver that goes in the actual speaker. In the end, it could be inferior or superior. Only the people who designed the thing know. Most of the time, it is just as good in one prospective, but worse off in another. In the end, it does not really matter because the whole point is to make a design that does the same thing in the end.

With the case of a TV and Walmart, yeah, Walmart COULD get a cheaper version, but it is not up to Sony or whatever manufacture. Yes, Walmart does have buying power to make companies make cheaper solutions....but they do not have teh buying power to make a whole new line of crappy tvs with just poor parts. It would cost a company too much to do that (it would involve re-engineering on the r&d side). You have to remember this also....lots of this stuff is built by subcontracts...much like how dell underpriced everyone years ago. This is how these TVs are built now. They make specs and firms design them and submit them. Sony buys them and puts them together to make one product. The cheaper one obvioulsy wins most of the time. This is done whether or not the stuff goes to walmart or some high end snob shop.

How does this relate to walmart and cheaper prices? Well...if there is a new iteration of the TV, the Sony would want to get rid of the older version. There is two choices...sell all their old stuff to a cheaper outfit who would simply rebrand it or sell to walmart because they would be only the only company who have enough buying power to resell all that merchnadise without putting it on the 75% clearance rack.
 

Uhtrinity

Platinum Member
Dec 21, 2003
2,263
202
106
Stopped at the local Walmart expecting this deal to be dead or too good to be true. They had the model on display for about $1,600, so I asked a sales rep, and sure enough they had one in the back. Got the tv for the advertised price of $898 plus $60 for the 2 year service plan and sales tax.
 

GprophetB

Platinum Member
Jun 20, 2003
2,632
0
76
Uhtrinity could you post some pics once you get it set up? Whats the model number on the TV?

Does it have any banding on the picture / backlight?
 

Uhtrinity

Platinum Member
Dec 21, 2003
2,263
202
106
Just got it hooked up to the pc using hdmi, my old setup was a rear Projection CRT Hitachi connected through DVI. The Picture is great at 1920 X 1080 @ 60 hz. No banding what so ever on the pc. I will look onto getting some pics. However the tv is giving me an 'incompatible audio' error. I'm running it off of the hdmi port on my ATI 4830. Will have to see if it is a driver issue.

edit: Model LC52SB57UN as stated in the ad.

 
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zephyrprime

Diamond Member
Feb 18, 2001
7,512
2
81
For what its worth, last year during BF SEARS had a specific model of TV (I beleive it was sharp or samsung) That i confirmed with a sales rep was only available at SEARS.

Now does this mean it was ONLY made for sears with cheaper / less components... i don't know.

Just my 2c and i wouldn't be surprised if huge retailers make behind the scene deals with these companies of this nature.

Stuff like that happens all the time. It's so customers can't do price matching.