TV recommendation

pete6032

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2010
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Looking to get a 50-55 inch TV for my basement and there are about 100 models that fit my budget of $500-$700. Any recommendations on brands to avoid/stick to and features to look for? I just need something that works. I don't plan to use it for video games or Blu Ray or Hi-Fi sound. Just need a TV that I can watch occasionally and be satisfied with the picture quality.
 

SKORPI0

Lifer
Jan 18, 2000
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Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
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I would look at "last-gen" Samsung QLED panels personally.... they have most of the "punch" of the 1st-gen OLED's although "blacks" are an obvious step down and burn-in is a non-issue for most folks. (as opposed to OLED's where it CAN be big problem with static menus/logos despite people "blowing sunshine up your a$$" to the contrary)

Best Buy has this one in stock for $699.

Samsung - 55” Class Q60B QLED 4K Smart Tizen TV (Best Buy)

6502243_sd.jpg;maxHeight=1000;maxWidth=1000


 

Meghan54

Lifer
Oct 18, 2009
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I would look at "last-gen" Samsung QLED panels personally.... they have most of the "punch" of the 1st-gen OLED's although "blacks" are an obvious step down and burn-in is a non-issue for most folks. (as opposed to OLED's where it CAN be big problem with static menus/logos despite people "blowing sunshine up your a$$" to the contrary)

Best Buy has this one in stock for $699.

Samsung - 55” Class Q60B QLED 4K Smart Tizen TV (Best Buy)

6502243_sd.jpg;maxHeight=1000;maxWidth=1000




Owned a 55” Samsung Q80R (a 2019 model) for a little over 3 years. Always thought it was great…until I bought an LG 55” B2 OLED ($564 + tax) from Lowes this past Nov (BF sales) to see how much of a difference there might be between them.

Two weeks later and the Samsung had found itself in a new home and I don’t regret it at all.
 
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Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
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Owned a 55” Samsung Q80R (a 2019 model) for a little over 3 years. Always thought it was great…until I bought an LG 55” B2 OLED ($564 + tax) from Lowes this past Nov (BF sales) to see how much of a difference there might be between them.

Two weeks later and the Samsung had found itself in a new home and I don’t regret it at all.

It depends on what you'll be using it for which is pretty much the conclusion Linus comes to.

As a TV only for normal everyday use a current-tech OLED is a fantastic choice. (and @ $564 that was a great deal congrats!)

As a "mixed use display" device for gaming with a console AND use as a TV they're a very good choice with a few caveats.

As mainly a PC monitor however they're a risky proposition with potential burn-in and the stupid "can't be fully disabled" auto-dimming feature really putting a damper on the amazing image quality. (to be clear the dimming is a "TV" issue not an "OLED" issue and doesn't effect dedicated monitors.)

I ended up going with nano-IPS (despite its drawbacks) for my new gaming monitor mainly for these reasons among others.


EDIT: If I WERE going to get an OLED it would be this bad boy! ;)

Corsair XENEON Flex 45WQHD240 Gaming Monitor - 45-Inch OLED (Amazon @ $1999)

91koNzZ7hHL._AC_SL1500_.jpg
 
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MtnMan

Diamond Member
Jul 27, 2004
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Dumb TV with good picture, then use Fire Stick, Roku, Apple TV, or similar device for streaming.

I have a 65" 4K HiSense smart TV, which is Android based. That works fine, but I much prefer using an Amazon 4K Fire Stick for all our streaming content, which is 99% of what we watch.
 

Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
30,277
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The real problem with "cutting loose the purse-strings" for a really nice/high-end "smart" (read: STUPID TV) is software updates. (or lack thereof!)

Most of these things get AT MOST 2-3 years of actual updates to the the OS even made available, never mind actually installed by the average tech-illiterate user out there. And they get connected to your wifi and/or wired ethernet along with the already "always-on" provider connection. Freaking awesome.

What could possibly go wrong ?!? :p :oops:


Seriously either buy a monitor that doesn't come with that garbage tacked on or go with a relatively cheap TV and replace it in a few years.
 
Nov 17, 2019
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" Any recommendations ... "


Yup. You won't like it though.

None. Save $5-600 plus all the electricity.

I turned mine off years ago and haven't missed it at all.


Told ya you wouldn't like it.
 

pete6032

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2010
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Dumb TV with good picture, then use Fire Stick, Roku, Apple TV, or similar device for streaming.

I have a 65" 4K HiSense smart TV, which is Android based. That works fine, but I much prefer using an Amazon 4K Fire Stick for all our streaming content, which is 99% of what we watch.
What model Hisense do you have?
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
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Dumb TVs don't exist any more, except at the very low end which you should try to avoid. Of course you can use any streaming box of your choice.

Hisense has great bang for the buck (while still beating the cheap TVs in quality). For your budget, you can get a U7 series:


A small plus is they have a 2 year warranty when most affordable TVs have just one year. Check Best Buy for Super Bowl sale prices and availability.
 

SKORPI0

Lifer
Jan 18, 2000
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Bought a 65" H9F Dec 2019 at Best Buy on sale $900. Amazing brightness in a low light room. Used it for 2 years and replaced it with a LG OLED55C6 (4K with 1080p 3D) Jan 2022.

Screenshot 2023-02-11 at 19-22-33 Photo - Google Photos.png

Pics of 65" H9F screen.
20211224_142226.jpg

20211224_143223.jpg

20211224_143245.jpg
 
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pete6032

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2010
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Dumb TVs don't exist any more, except at the very low end which you should try to avoid. Of course you can use any streaming box of your choice.

Hisense has great bang for the buck (while still beating the cheap TVs in quality). For your budget, you can get a U7 series:


A small plus is they have a 2 year warranty when most affordable TVs have just one year. Check Best Buy for Super Bowl sale prices and availability.
Thanks. I came to the same conclusion after doing a lot of research. Hisense seems to fit my needs. I bought a 55" U7 from Costco.
 

MtnMan

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Jul 27, 2004
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Just went on a date with a woman that doesn't own a TV. second one I've met.

She streams the stuff she watches on her laptop
I like a big screen, and big sound (not necessary loud) of surround sound and subwoofer. Even watching on a laptop with some good bluetooth headphones doesn't compare with Dolby Atmos.
 

Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
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My problem is that I don't watch enough TV to make a real "home-theater" a high priority.... I have a fairly nice 60hz/1080p Samsung 46 inch TV but I very rarely use it at all. (really the only thing I ever watch is live sports)

I watch 99% of the video content I consume on my gaming PC.... although I do have a relatively large 38 inch display.
 

[DHT]Osiris

Lifer
Dec 15, 2015
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TCL is a good fit. Good enough to let you know you didn't buy a turd, dumb enough to not break because the coffee maker on it went on the fritz, smart enough to connect to your plex library, and cheap enough to stay in the triple digits. We've had one for several years with zero issues.
 

repoman0

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Jun 17, 2010
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As mainly a PC monitor however they're a risky proposition with potential burn-in and the stupid "can't be fully disabled" auto-dimming feature really putting a damper on the amazing image quality. (to be clear the dimming is a "TV" issue not an "OLED" issue and doesn't effect dedicated monitors.)

Auto dimming on the LG OLEDs can be fully disabled with a $7 service remote.
 

repoman0

Diamond Member
Jun 17, 2010
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What could possibly go wrong ?!? :p :oops:

Nothing if you just don’t connect it to your network. Both of my oled TVs are air gapped. All these TV manufacturers make money by selling ads through their OS now and by collecting and selling your data if they can get to it. An Apple TV streaming box is easily worth it at $100-150ish for the better UI and because the company at least pays lip service to privacy.
 
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Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
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Nothing if you just don’t connect it to your network. Both of my oled TVs are air gapped. All these TV manufacturers make money by selling ads through their OS now and by collecting and selling your data if they can get to it. An Apple TV streaming box is easily worth it at $100-150ish for the better UI and because the company at least pays lip service to privacy.

Isn't that a bit like not connecting your smartphone to the network for most people?

Streaming devices like Roku or Apple TV DO get a ton more security updates to be fair but the vast majority of "smart" TV users just connect the wires and follow the on-screen prompts on whatever model TV they buy.

;)

I do agree though.... turn the dang thing off and unplug it ... hack that MF'er!