You can read forums and reviews and so called experts but at the end of the day you just jump for whatever you decide.. if you don't like it just return it in 14 days if you get it from Curry's or Amazon.. I've had my £499 LG TV since March and for me it's quality, I upgraded from a 42" HD TV and I can clearly see the difference, can't see any flaws in the screen and the details stunning. Everythings relative to you, I read everything I can and make my own decisionsbuying a new TV is harder than choosing which car to buy, the amount of choice is minding numbing.
At £500 I wouldn’t even look at the current UHD/4K nonsense, it’s kinda where HD ready was before they all went Full HD screens,and the panel will be edge lit led uniformity will be crap,you’ll see the led firing in the edge and it will bug the tits off you. Only when the OLED becomes mainstream will it be worth it, that and the screen sizes are big enough to see the extra pixels.
I’m sticking with Plasma for now !
For your reading enjoyment
https://www.avforums.com/guide/the-ultimate-tv-buying-guide.10617
Mate I’m not even going to click that link lol.
My criteria
1. I can see stuff
2. Picture is better than my 7 year old tv
3. Less than £500.
Done.
I’m not a tv enthusiast mate. My issue is having to much choice.
That tv seems decent, cheap enough so that’s okay with me :smile:
I’m not a tv enthusiast mate. My issue is having to much choice.
That tv seems decent, cheap enough so that’s okay with me :smile:
Mate I’m not even going to click that link lol.
My criteria
1. I can see stuff
2. Picture is better than my 7 year old tv
3. Less than £500.
Done.
Would have called you Scott tbf
Just one thing... this is nearly three years old now and tv tech has moved on a LOT. Premium level OLED sets are still the domain of the lucky / rich few but some of the lower- to mid-range TV's (i.e. upto, say, £1.5k) offer very good quality and features. A few notable edge-lit displays can be had for under 1k with good contrast and decent black levels, although HDR brightness and fidelity cannot compete with the premium sets at that price. Generally the majority of cheaper TV's offer good SD, HD (1080p) and UHD (4K) quality for the mainstream but are lacking in terms of how good their HDR / brightness are relative to more expensive sets (and other fancy features that vary between manufacturers). It's just a matter of time until this tech trickles down to a more affordable price and the adoption of 4K / HDR content becomes more widespread.
Get some pics up and an honest review as i'm still after one potentiallyNew tv delivered, will put it together later tonight. Good service from very.
yeah "odd film in bed"...Whilst on the topic of tvs.. my LG is going to blow up soon. It's got a green barcode along the bottom and a weird colour loss effect in one of the corners. Not bad for 8 years.
It's for my bedroom, mainly for xbox and the odd film in bed and I think the current 32' is sufficient, but everyone seems to be on 60'+ mental! Shall I stay at 32' or go a bit bigger?