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New TV - what to get
We're thinking about getting a new TV. Our old TV is a 12-13yo Samsung 46".
I was thinking (because we've had such good luck with the current TV) that we'd get another Samsung, maybe bump up to 55" (we're currently at 46, I think). We don't watch a ton of TV, so I don't want to spend a ton, but I want something nice. I was thinking about a 55" Q60T or Q70T ($700-1000). Any thoughts, recommendations? I haven't looked at TV specs in years (probably since 2007/2008 when we bought this one). |
I just went through this: went from a Vizio 47" to a Sony Bravia 55" The picture quality is great, but the sound is "so-so" - with these thin TVs, you pretty much need to get a sound bar to get good sound.
One of the big factors that drove my decision was the "Smart" TV functionality; not so much was it "smart" but could it be controlled. It's hard to not buy a "Smart" TV nowdays. What turned me away from Vizio, Samsung, LG, etc was the built-in snooping functionality, and the ads in the user interface - as you use the UI and move through menus, the TV displays ads. The trick is, if you go to the store to check them out in person you probably won't see these "features" but do some google searches and you'll find the complaining on various boards. Because my wife wants to use the Hulu app, I don't have a choice but to connect it to the internet, so I got a Pi Hole. The amount of traffic from the TV to parts unknown is sobering. The average Joe won't GAFF, but I do. I aggressively block what I can - letting through just enough so the apps will work. For example. it was interesting to see a Subaru commercial, while at the same time the TV initiated a connection to Subaru.com. My TV has no business talking to Facebook, either. This is a log screenshot of roughly 1 minute of watching Hulu on the new TV. The TV just pulled an update a couple of weeks ago, and the external traffic jumped about 75%. I suspect they ship them with more "quiet" firmware, and once it's bought and installed, it updates itself with the more aggressive version. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1596922152.jpg |
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So the Bravia doesn't have the ads and snooping? That's good to know about the ads, that would piss me off, and the amount of outbound connectivity is sobering. I'd begun to wonder about some other brands. I'd been planning to get a sound bar, but then wondered about the Q80T which has more speakers and amp built in, so maybe it's not necessary. THe one thing that I wonder about though is that all of the thin TVs have to project the sound to the rear or sides, and it seems like having it projected out the front is better. Thanks, I'll keep looking. |
So the Bravia doesn't have the ads and snooping?
No UI ads, but in TV mode I still see external connections; I can watch something and pull the logs if you wish. |
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Ugh! I told the missus, and her response was "do we really need a new TV?" And I just recently threw away and old SOHO-sized Cisco firewall. < edit > Problem solved https://www.amazon.com/Fortinet-FortiGate-Security-Firewall-Appliance/dp/B01HOOBAZ8 < /edit > |
I got an LG - it is very nice screen-wise, but the browser included has serious issues and tech support is quite poor.
I think Sony is still the MB of TVs, or the BMW, or... |
throw the one you have away and don't get another one.
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I picked up a TCL series 6. 55 inch a few years ago. Did a lot of research. It was
one of the highest rated tv's in its price range and above. About $550 at Best buy. Great picture. I've been very happy with it and everybody else who has viewed it has said great picture as well. |
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While we don't have cable or satellite, we do have Netflix and DVDs that I have ripped and stream locally. I'm pretty unlikely to get rid of TV completely. |
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It's always been at the top of the reviews. Upgraded my cable box to a newer digital box
Xfinity. That also was a key component. Comes with Roku and a number of other streaming services included. The series 6 is the key. For the price it was hard to beat. Have a older Marantz reciever. Used the Optical output from the tv to the receiver for my home theater setup. HDMI cables for DVD and the cable box. Check out the reviews on it. Hard to beat for the price. |
I initially thought "about $500 will get me an upgrade from the TV that I've got now." Then as I looked, as so often is the case, I thought, "but 700 would get more, and then 1000 would get more than that." I'm back to thinking that maybe $500, and a sound bar (and a firewall to block all of the smart crap). I guess I'm going to have to perform more research.
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A long time ago my daughter gifted me with a TV for Christmas, or was it my birthday? I forget which it was. I'd caught wind of the coming gift and told her this is what I want xxxx and if you get something else I'll return it.
She got me the Sony XBR 52" I wanted. Costly at the time ($2400?) but it has been stellar so far. Wife got the GEEK Squad to come out and dial it in picture wise since they are all loaded as if they're going to be displayed in a store. Once the picture was under control it looked fantastic. Still does. I run it thru my Denon stereo with all the speakers for surround sound. I love it. I could rattle the windows with movies until we got double paned windows that don't rattle. I love watching it and really enjoy the sound system I've been able to put together. We don't go out to the movies so this is my entertainment. |
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When I read these threads I get a sense of doom that I have no idea how to configure fire-walls, my sat-based internet, etc.
And trust me, I can't do it myself. Serious question: Are there services that can come and do the installs? I assume so but what would you smart folks look for? Is there a national brand of folks that do this, etc.? I know I am behind and need advice. I can start a separate thread. |
Our aunt moved recently and asked for TV advice, so my brother and I went to Best Buy and were blown away by the 4K image quality and wound up getting 4K TVs for ourselves. I told my aunt that she was bad for my budget and I got a TV- she interpreted that to mean I bought her a TV... um, no.
We really felt comfortable with the advise we got in the Magnolia section of Best Buy. Seems like there's two styles of image- one that's more accurate to real life and another that's more vivid. OLED is the best, but it didn't seem necessary for my bedroom with no wide angle of view issues. The Sonys were of the real life camp, so I got this one: https://www.sony.com/electronics/televisions/xbr-x950g-x955g-x957g-series I have to admit I have it set to a more vivid mode at home- it just looks better. It's like putting salt on your food. I've seen more basic 4Ks around $500-600 there, but figured I'd do the job right the first time and spending $1,000 was worth it over a long ownership period. Then there's the sound bar, protected power source, and Best Buy installation, so it can add up. You get a discount on the equipment if you buy the warranty and having the Geek Squad come out to my house and replace stuff seemed a lot better than scratching my head when there's a problem, so that's the way I went. When this thing is cranking 4K, the picture is stunning. If you play a DVD, you'll get the best image, but I haven't gotten a 4K DVD player yet. Streaming is so easy, but I was getting crummy picture quality and streaming issues. I shouldn't have been, I was set up with 75 Mbps through Comcast, but doing a speed test show I was getting around 10-20 Mbps. Thanks, Comcast. I called them and they said they were upgrading the neighborhood and gave me a credit. Slickdeals.net is a great source of screaming deals- sort of a Bring-a-Trailer of everything. https://slickdeals.net/newsearch.php?src=SearchBarV2&q=4K+TVs&searcharea= deals&searchin=first |
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It's interesting, about the Ads, the site https://www.rtings.com goes very deep into the performance of various TVs and even compares or allows comparison of various models. They list 2 things, Ads and "Suggested Content in Home" Ads: Whether the TV's main interface has ads. This does take into account ads in third-party apps. Suggested Content in Home: Whether suggested content appears on the TV's home menu or main menu. Suggested content can include recommended movies, TV shows, YouTube videos, etc. Apparently, the HiSense H9F (competitor to Sony X900F) does not have Ads, and has suggested content in home that you can disable. And as Thom has advised, the Sony has ads that you're just stuck with, and has suggested content in home, but you can opt out of that. But in their review of the Hisense, they are careful to say that Ads could be added at any point, and that Sony has either added or increased Ads. I guess that's a way of subsidizing low TV margins for the manuf. https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/compare/sony-x900f-vs-hisense-h9f/585/908 |
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Yeah, I suspect we'll be happy with a new TV. I'm interested in some of the new features and think they'll make a big difference in the picture. I'm looking at a Sony a step down from the one you list, I believe. If nothing else, it should be a lot more efficient than what we've got now which is ancient, and puts out a ton of heat. You can feel it when you walk past. |
https://www.avsforum.com/forums/lcd-flat-panel-displays.166/
they like the TLC 6 series for the dark blacks [local dimming] when I got one a few years ago it was rated the best 4k tv for the money [under 1K $] |
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/lAD6Obi7Cag" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
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Got laid up and could not walk and convalesced in my recliner for a year.
Called a good local TV store, not a Best Buy, etc, because a rear projection 50in TV turned yellow. They sent a guy out and he surveyed my room etc. They brought out a 65" Sony bravia and hooked everything up. At the time I had cable, over thee air, VHS, CD discs, Apple TV, and all sound played thru my receiver for surround. Went ahead with then expensive Sony because figured would watching a lot being laid up. Get comments on how great the picture looks. Watched all kinds of sources for movies. Sony's bravia was cheapest but did not have everything. No longer watch or listen to hard media, everything is streamed. Shut down all media services and uploaded software to the AppleTV and it is now my only source. The Bravia 65" TV is only for watching video from the AppleTV now. All the Smart TV apps quit working, Sony went to using PSP. I did not. Tv's audio goes to a Sony receiver for Surround Sound. it was before 4K so only does 1080. Still get comments how great the picture looks. So I would recommend the best picture and for get all the other stuff they are cramming into the TVs. The screens last longer than the support for the smart tv apps. |
I can't recommend any brands because I don't live in the US but I wouldn't get anything "top shelf". Tech is changing so fast right now and anything is bound to feel OLD really quickly. I like the idea of a direct connection to your home wifi so you can use it to stream content. Most TV's have that now.
Is 4K affordable yet? Mr brother bought a 4K big screen TV about 12 months ago and he loves it but damn is wasn't cheap. 8K TVs are now available but they're really expensive. Before LCD's & Plasma it was easy... A Sony Trinitron was the default if you wanted a good TV. That seems like a long time ago now. |
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Google internet security firms and then start dueing do diligence... There are also books and texts on this. One has the takeaway that security defense should be pushed to the outer edge of the fleet / network... |
Hmm, they do have the TCL 6 in 65" which would be nice, and still at a great price, but the legs are a the extreme ends of the TV which won't work with our "stand".
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I've owned a 65" 4K Vizio for almost 3 years now. It's been great..excellent picture.
I bought it at Walmart for $999....now the same type tv is $699 at Walmart. |
On my 55 inch,I had the same issue. My stand was narrower than the overall length. I simply
inverted the legs inward and they fit fine. You could also wall mount it. |
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Picture is incredible, but it's started to suffer from screen burn. LG says their OLED screens don't burn. they lie. It's not bad but if you look really close you can see it. At this price that shouldn't happen. It's mostly due to the idiotic morons who think it's a good idea to put a permanent LOGO on the lower-right hand corner of the screen to advertise their channel. Military channel is one, stopped watching it on the big TV and removed it from the favorites list. There are several other channels that do it too, dumazzes. |
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We have a 42” as the daily TV, then a projector & screen for movie night. I don’t really want to watch the news on a 100” screen, but it’s nice to have that big screen for [insert movie here].
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I went through the same thing last week.
Wifey kept watching her YouTube and Netflix shows on my 75" Samsung. Said the upstairs 7 year old Sony Smart functions sucked. After a couple of hours of researching I thought my head was going to pop. Went with the Samsung 55" Q70T. Costco to the door. No dicking around. Can't beat the QLED and same format as the 75" so no learning curve. I'm getting too impatient (old) for all this crap to save a couple hundred bucks. |
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I'd like to have something more modern (energy efficient) with a better picture. A little bigger wouldn't be bad either. I'd really go for 60", but these days it seems to be all 55 or 65. I was going to go 55, but I think we've decided to go 65. The TCL series 6 is NOT available right now in 55", but it is available in 65". The Hisense H9F actually rates a little higher in some ways, but I think that's mostly like comparing Canon/Nikon, Mustang/Camaro, etc.... The Hisense H9G is also not currently available. The TCL is a couple hundred bucks cheaper (as well as being available), so I will probably go with that. I'm also going to get a sound bar, and probably a firewall. |
Just a story for you guys, somewhat related to this thread as it does involve TV's.
My sister-in-law's husband helped my daughter install my 52" in the living room. She got it for me while I was away on a trip. I remember coming home and putting something in the living room when I got home. Now, the way our house is set up, you come in thru the garage and into the kitchen 90% of the time. We don't use our front door much at all. The hallway/kitchen/living room door ways are kind of all together in a confluence of walls. I walked into the living room, put down whatever it was (probably my camera bag) and turned right around and walked out. The only thing I remember registering in my mind was my old TV was sitting on the floor, right at that confluence of walls. As I walked into the kitchen to go to the garage for more of my stuff, my daughter and wife were sitting at the dining room table. I noticed that they looked at each other with a look of jaw dropping disbelief. I stopped, midway into the garage and asked what was up. They both incredulously asked if I was blind. I asked what do you mean, of course I'm not blind. You didn't even NOTICE what was in the living room? Then things started to click. Why was the old TV sitting on the floor? I walked back into the living room and was blown away. I could not believe I'd walked in and not even seen the new TV sitting there. My brother-in-law later told me he thought, at first, that the TV was going to be too big for the room. But, once he got it in there he saw that it was just the right size. My wife wanted a new one at the same time. Said she didn't want a big one, nothing larger than a 40". I got her a Bravia 46" and haven't ever heard it was too big. (Our family room, where she works on her sewing 90% of the time, is 17'x22', so 46 actually looks small) Edit- Our TV's put out a lot of heat too since they are both going on 15 yrs old at least. |
I would replace your Samsung with another Samsung. The functions will all be similar and I think their smart TV function works well.
You might find better prices with a 65" since that is more common as everyone is increasing size and creating home theaters. Costco has good pricing and lots to choose from. |
I recently bought 2 Vizio TVs. One to replace a dying samsung plasma and another to add to my front room for my kid to watch. I picked them because of their picture quality, interface and price. rtings.com has really comprehensive reviews.
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1597094236.jpg
I have three LG OLED TV's at home in at the office. They have a smart remote that you talk into and it finds the channels you want for you. Pretty fantastic TV. |
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