Complete with a 5 year guarantee, enjoy the perfect home cinema experience with our wide selection of televisions including Smart TV, 4K and LED from LG, Samsung, Sony and more.
Key Features
•OLED 4K TV
•ULTRA HD 4K Resolution
•Perfect Black
•Smart TV with webOS
•Premium Sound by Harman / Kardon
•4K Upscaler
Perfect Black
Thanks to the self-lighting pixels, which are unique to LG OLED 4K TV, you get infinite contrast, delivering the deepest and darks blacks possible today. Lightsout.
Perfect Colour
Due to OLED's unique self lighting pixels, the colour range and accuracy are dramatically improved. The result? Millions of pixels painting a picture with true-to-life colour reproduction like you have never seen before.
Self-lighting Pixels
Fusing OLED technology with 4K resolution, LG OLED 4K TV brings you the finest viewing experience imaginable. With self-lighting pixels - meaning they switch on and off individually - OLED delivers the purest blacks, most brilliant colours and clearest images.
ULTRA HD 4K RESOLUTION
ULTRA HD 4K resolution is four times that of Full HD, resulting in brilliant clarity and vivid details that amaze, even up close. Enjoy a new standard of definition.
ABSOLUTE MOTION CLARITY
With a response speed of over one thousand times faster than LED, OLED allows you to appreciate fast moving scenes like sports or action movies free from blur.
webOS
LG's award winning Smart TV webOS platform revolutionises the way you watch and experience entertainment on your UHD TV. Free from the complexities of advanced technology, you can now enjoy Smart TV the way it is supposed to be, simple and intuitive, bringing together some of the best catch-up TV, movies, sport and music services. Whatever you wish to watch, find, launch, or play, you can do it easily with webOS, the efficient and user-friendly Smart TV designed with you in mind.
Sound Designed by Harman / Kardon™
A highly refined speaker system engineered by harman / kardon will give your ears a premium audio experience. So now you can fill your room with the ultimate sound, to match the ultimate picture.
Art Screen
Thanks to an intuitive design which creates a floating screen effect, you can now enjoy a whole new level of immersion and style.
Top comments
jdbigguy
9 Aug 1617#5
I am a working class person and I could afford this as could most of my working class friends. I almost certainly wouldn't want to spend my money in this way, but that is a question of personal choices and has little to do with my "class"
Mad ass
9 Aug 1613#26
I'm very short sighted so bought this. Absolute bargain at £269.99. I almost bought another one for the bedroom.
malachi to Jonnyblock
9 Aug 169#23
Useless fad no one uses anymore, just like curved TVs.
MarkBroomhallCrewe
10 Aug 168#36
Would this upscale xhamster to 4K?
Latest comments (68)
mmulho
14 Oct 16#68
Ridiculous price for this TV compared to anywhere else! :confused::confused::confused:
Deepdene
14 Oct 161#67
This is ok to buy again at Selfridges, I was looking at one of this years new LG 65in oleds, but this is too good a deal to pass up <3
This is an absolute bargain....i paid 3.5k for mine 6 months ago and its fantastic...mine is a very good panel...but others have had problems
smiler594 to mr_mojo_risin
14 Aug 16#65
I'm jealous! Enjoy your telly! But there's no way on earth I could justify 3.5k on a telly
add23
12 Aug 16#64
deal has expired can someone expire it?
Brabus_Duddy
12 Aug 16#63
Well early reports suggest they are going to surprise everyone and launch for Christmas 2016 which will kill Microsoft, Xbox gamer for life here but I don't do the trolling lol, so in a way I hope it is around same time as microsoft. Anyway about the HDR TV situation..........I see the OLED55E6V is what I would love. Has both HDR formats supported. Maybe not perfect but I am still waiting for it to come down as @ £3,500 it is very steep!
For HDR It's all clear as mud across the industry to be honest, you have the likes of Samsung and Hisense promising firmware updates for HDMI ports but have updated apps built in that support HDR via streaming, such as Netflix. Good for streamers, bad for gamers. Then you have some TV's that just support it as they have the correct HDMI ports but their own built in apps need updating for streaming, such as LG did. Good for gamers with an Xbox One S but bad for streamers! The only 100% guaranteed way to have everything is to buy a high end 2017 model next May when they start to hit market!
Trying to find more than a handful of HDR video is the challenge, I hope that the new PS4 Neo (Not an Xbox player at all) is out this year and supports HDR games from early on.
super_leeds_86
10 Aug 161#33
- This model DOES have HDR and it has support via both streaming and HDMI ports.
I own the 920v model, picked it up from Costco for a ridiculous £1400. My OLED replaced a Panasonic Plasma which at the time I was happy with but it had to go once I compared OLED with Plasma (Had the 50 Plasma and the 55 OLED side by side whilst testing video sources). No screen burn, no banding, 4 months of ownership. Give it a decent source of 1080p or 4k video and it eats it up and spits out a sublime image.
For information both this 950v and the 920v model supports HDR via a single HDMI port (HDMI Port number 2) and via streamed sources, a box appears in the top left of the screen saying it when a HDR video plays.
The 960v model is more complicated, it supports HDR video from streamed sources, but NOT via it's HDMI ports. This is one thing to be careful of, as I expect many people will be connecting devices via cable, just because it says 'HDR supported' it may mean via streaming.
I wasnt aware. Both HDR 10 & Dolby Vision? I am only bothered about 10 from gaming point of view but nice to have Dolby Vision too :wink:
pukenukem
10 Aug 16#58
What's xhamster? Is it like the xFactor for pets? My kids will love that!
pukenukem
10 Aug 16#57
Concur, have a 3D TV, didn't get it for the 3D, only watched 1 3D film on it, well part of one film to try it out. Adds nothing but more darkness and a headache. Interesting recent discovery on the curved TV front, I have just bought a 21:9 computer monitor, ultrawide as its known. Now, the format is awesome for movies, however it really could benefit from a wee curve given its width. If we see this format move to our TVs (for those with big living rooms) I could see a use for curved in this aspect ratio. 16:9 however....totally pointless.
malachi
9 Aug 165#1
Nice to see OLED is becoming cheaper
MyMarIsProperSound to malachi
9 Aug 164#2
haha, still a long way to go before the regular working class person like myself can afford it though :disappointed:
deathwishdave to malachi
10 Aug 16#56
I helped make these possible! In 1999 I worked with industry on my degree thesis on how we could get OLEDs to produce the colour green.
andy1989
10 Aug 16#42
2 years and these will be £500
jonspurs to andy1989
10 Aug 16#43
Yea probably...just for comparison, my Hitachi (genuine, not the rebadged Argos stuff) 42" plasma cost £1800 around 7 years ago! A cheapie 42" probably can be had for £180 nowadays....
Bought from John Lewis for the 5 year guarantee...and is still going strong *touchwood*...the only thing to replace plasma with is OLED...I don't need this LG right now but soooo want it....ahhhhh HotUKDeals!!!
snoopy18 to andy1989
10 Aug 161#45
Nope
Jimmyboy to andy1989
10 Aug 16#55
And in 2 years time there will be something else on the horizon so can keep waiting and waiting and waiting.
mreriksen
10 Aug 16#54
I mean, Cold! it's not Blaupunkt from Tesco! lol
mreriksen
10 Aug 16#53
Great price have some heat! I wish I had some spare cash :disappointed:
andy1989
10 Aug 16#52
Maybe not that low. But won't be far off. They will reduce by at least 50%
andy1989
10 Aug 16#51
Yeah panasonic plasma still beats everything up to OLED
Fat_Bob
10 Aug 16#50
Thanks to OP I took the plunge. Been waiting for OLED to drop for a couple of months now.
Fingers crossed this batch doesn't have any of the aforementioned issues.
II WATTS II
10 Aug 16#49
Cold not QLED. :smile:
MarkBroomhallCrewe
10 Aug 168#36
Would this upscale xhamster to 4K?
581d to MarkBroomhallCrewe
10 Aug 16#39
Its its native res, everything will be upscaled to match.
cmc1234 to MarkBroomhallCrewe
10 Aug 161#48
So immersive you'd be ducking out the way of those pop shots!
jonspurs
10 Aug 16#47
Haha fair enough Jack Bauer...(when are you going to have a new series?! Been watching you since season one!)...but just thought people vote hot/cold due to the deal/value...like saying you can get an AK-47 machine gun for £50 (rrp £500) is a hot deal...but then people vote cold because of the bad recoil :-P
alecb
10 Aug 16#46
Banding sounds like a problem that my wife has - think of the Michelin man!
I would post a pic but it wouldn't be very pretty so I'll be kind and save you all from the agony :laughing:
I don't think she'd appreciate my intentions if I told her why I wanted her to pose!!
"Dead meat" comes nowhere near.
jonspurs
9 Aug 164#18
Good deal - heat given.
But you'll probably get some clowns voting cold because they can get a 65 inch CCFL LCD "Digihome" for £269 instead...
ASD_NINJA to jonspurs
10 Aug 161#44
Yep. That's definitely the only reason anyone would possibly cold this. Those pesky peasants. It couldn't possibly be due to the banding or judder issues this model is known for!
MarkBroomhallCrewe
10 Aug 16#41
Thanks and thanks OP just ordered.
the porter
10 Aug 16#40
oos
russtyk
10 Aug 16#38
I have the 55" 960V version, love the curve and the 3d is amazing.. I saw the flat and curved side by side in the shop and the curved version just looks so much nicer. Can't say I really notice it when watching TV.
simonturner69
10 Aug 161#37
Voted cold.
You can get a 65 inch CCFL LCD "Digihome" for £269.
UHD and 4K are both terms used to describe the next generation of Ultra High Definition TV resolutions (also referred to sometimes as 2160P i.e. double the amount of horizontal pixels of the current HD resolution of 1080P)
HDR (High Dynamic Range..) is an additional feature of the UHD/4K standard that expands the colour gamut and contrast/brightness abilities of the TVs display panel, to help images look more realistic in tandem with the higher resolutions. Most 4K TV models 2015/2016 onwards should be HDR compatible but look for certification to confirm when buying.
mr_mojo_risin
10 Aug 163#32
It always amazes me on here the amount of people that post comments when they have absolutely no idea what they are talking about....This tv has 3d, probably the best I've ever seen, including the cinema....hdr , this model does hdr 10 via hdmi and I believe by September on both amazon prime and netflix on-board apps.....mine has suffered absolutely no image retention or screen burn.....oh and banding on OLEDs describes panel banding not colour banding, ie darker bands on the screen which are evident on panning shots, football, golf etc.....my tv does not suffer from this, but some peoples have..
loop
10 Aug 161#30
Good price but if you have a few thousand to throw at a TV then try and stretch to the B6 or E6 which are better than this.
Mad ass
9 Aug 1613#26
I'm very short sighted so bought this. Absolute bargain at £269.99. I almost bought another one for the bedroom.
hcc27 to Mad ass
10 Aug 162#29
Mate, I believe you had picked up the 6.5" version :smirk:
Brabus_Duddy
10 Aug 16#28
I believe this one doesn't support HDR 10 or Dolby Vision so for gaming, when a full 4K gaming machine comes out, this would not work under 4K HDR.
Nice TV though. OLED is far superior to LED.
Jonnyblock
9 Aug 161#21
You'd think at that price it would have 3d.
malachi to Jonnyblock
9 Aug 169#23
Useless fad no one uses anymore, just like curved TVs.
I also own the 55" version of this TV and have never had any issues with image retention in the 10 months I have had it (and that's with my son having 4 hours stints on the Xbox playing Forza!). If you are getting severe image retention (there is no way it will be screen burn) then I would put in a call to an engineer.
In fact I have not had any of the issues reported (banding, vignette issues etc.). The TV does suffer if you feed it a poor source (some of the Sky channels are appalling).
Just drop onto AV forums when you get a chance and try to find any TV that is perfect, whether you spend £500 or £5000.
This is an excellent price (I paid £300 less for the 55") for this size screen using OLED technology.
Jolleysaurus
9 Aug 161#22
Bargain.... Id expect to see me in the film I am watching for that money!
leejackson85
9 Aug 16#20
I own the 55" version of this and it's terrific.
Unfortunately though, it is incredibly susceptible to burn in/ghosting :disappointed: after two months of using it, watching a channel with a white logo in the top right for one-two hours a day and it appears to be there for good :disappointed: tried turning it off and not watching that channel for a few days/usual fixes documented.
Gutted.
RedRain
9 Aug 16#19
man thats a deal breaker that is it all sets or just random
roadie
9 Aug 16#10
What is banding again?
MBeeching to roadie
9 Aug 16#15
Distinct bars appearing on the screen instead of smooth gradients.
jonspurs to roadie
9 Aug 163#17
Justsuperman
9 Aug 16#16
Voted hot but Oleds are way to expensive for the average person
jallsey
9 Aug 166#4
HDR too, looking at reviews it's not perfect tho. Kind of needs to be to justify spending this much.
Justsuperman to jallsey
9 Aug 161#14
Yup, HDR isn't that great on Oleds yet
Itsbedo
9 Aug 164#11
Can't wait for one of these bad boys to drop below 1.5k...
pops1975 to Itsbedo
9 Aug 16#13
If it was that price now it would have been a no brainer :sunglasses:
pops1975
9 Aug 16#7
Hot but at this price would you start considering a 55" 2016 model... decisions, decisions lol.
Uncommon Sense to pops1975
9 Aug 161#8
They are completely different sizes, one is over 1800sq inches the other is only 1290 ish. If you are looking at a 65" you're not going to compromise for a 55". I am aware of how much better the 2016 panels are, and if you are already spending this much, and want the best quality, spending the extra should be easily justified. :smiley:
djlondon22 to pops1975
9 Aug 162#12
I have the 55 inch version and do sometime wish I had the extra 10 inches.... (here come the funny responses, bring em on!)
pops1975
9 Aug 16#9
Lol, you buying one then?
The price point is the same(ish), if I was buying I would consider whether a 55B6v offers significantly better image quality/colours over the EF950.
Everyone's preferences will vary - as with yours and mine.
jdbigguy
9 Aug 1617#5
I am a working class person and I could afford this as could most of my working class friends. I almost certainly wouldn't want to spend my money in this way, but that is a question of personal choices and has little to do with my "class"
nictry
9 Aug 164#3
Just be aware this and the 960 do suffer with banding
Opening post
Key Features
•OLED 4K TV
•ULTRA HD 4K Resolution
•Perfect Black
•Smart TV with webOS
•Premium Sound by Harman / Kardon
•4K Upscaler
Perfect Black
Thanks to the self-lighting pixels, which are unique to LG OLED 4K TV, you get infinite contrast, delivering the deepest and darks blacks possible today. Lightsout.
Perfect Colour
Due to OLED's unique self lighting pixels, the colour range and accuracy are dramatically improved. The result? Millions of pixels painting a picture with true-to-life colour reproduction like you have never seen before.
Self-lighting Pixels
Fusing OLED technology with 4K resolution, LG OLED 4K TV brings you the finest viewing experience imaginable. With self-lighting pixels - meaning they switch on and off individually - OLED delivers the purest blacks, most brilliant colours and clearest images.
ULTRA HD 4K RESOLUTION
ULTRA HD 4K resolution is four times that of Full HD, resulting in brilliant clarity and vivid details that amaze, even up close. Enjoy a new standard of definition.
ABSOLUTE MOTION CLARITY
With a response speed of over one thousand times faster than LED, OLED allows you to appreciate fast moving scenes like sports or action movies free from blur.
webOS
LG's award winning Smart TV webOS platform revolutionises the way you watch and experience entertainment on your UHD TV. Free from the complexities of advanced technology, you can now enjoy Smart TV the way it is supposed to be, simple and intuitive, bringing together some of the best catch-up TV, movies, sport and music services. Whatever you wish to watch, find, launch, or play, you can do it easily with webOS, the efficient and user-friendly Smart TV designed with you in mind.
Sound Designed by Harman / Kardon™
A highly refined speaker system engineered by harman / kardon will give your ears a premium audio experience. So now you can fill your room with the ultimate sound, to match the ultimate picture.
Art Screen
Thanks to an intuitive design which creates a floating screen effect, you can now enjoy a whole new level of immersion and style.
Top comments
Latest comments (68)
http://www.selfridges.com/GB/en/cat/lg-65-65ef950v-lg-oled-4k-tv_761-10044-LG65EF950V/
http://hometheaterreview.com/dolby-vision-vs-hdr10-what-you-need-to-know/
For HDR It's all clear as mud across the industry to be honest, you have the likes of Samsung and Hisense promising firmware updates for HDMI ports but have updated apps built in that support HDR via streaming, such as Netflix. Good for streamers, bad for gamers. Then you have some TV's that just support it as they have the correct HDMI ports but their own built in apps need updating for streaming, such as LG did. Good for gamers with an Xbox One S but bad for streamers! The only 100% guaranteed way to have everything is to buy a high end 2017 model next May when they start to hit market!
Trying to find more than a handful of HDR video is the challenge, I hope that the new PS4 Neo (Not an Xbox player at all) is out this year and supports HDR games from early on.
I own the 920v model, picked it up from Costco for a ridiculous £1400. My OLED replaced a Panasonic Plasma which at the time I was happy with but it had to go once I compared OLED with Plasma (Had the 50 Plasma and the 55 OLED side by side whilst testing video sources). No screen burn, no banding, 4 months of ownership. Give it a decent source of 1080p or 4k video and it eats it up and spits out a sublime image.
For information both this 950v and the 920v model supports HDR via a single HDMI port (HDMI Port number 2) and via streamed sources, a box appears in the top left of the screen saying it when a HDR video plays.
The 960v model is more complicated, it supports HDR video from streamed sources, but NOT via it's HDMI ports. This is one thing to be careful of, as I expect many people will be connecting devices via cable, just because it says 'HDR supported' it may mean via streaming.
http://www.trustedreviews.com/lg-65ef9500-review
Bought from John Lewis for the 5 year guarantee...and is still going strong *touchwood*...the only thing to replace plasma with is OLED...I don't need this LG right now but soooo want it....ahhhhh HotUKDeals!!!
Fingers crossed this batch doesn't have any of the aforementioned issues.
I would post a pic but it wouldn't be very pretty so I'll be kind and save you all from the agony :laughing:
I don't think she'd appreciate my intentions if I told her why I wanted her to pose!!
"Dead meat" comes nowhere near.
But you'll probably get some clowns voting cold because they can get a 65 inch CCFL LCD "Digihome" for £269 instead...
You can get a 65 inch CCFL LCD "Digihome" for £269.
HDR (High Dynamic Range..) is an additional feature of the UHD/4K standard that expands the colour gamut and contrast/brightness abilities of the TVs display panel, to help images look more realistic in tandem with the higher resolutions. Most 4K TV models 2015/2016 onwards should be HDR compatible but look for certification to confirm when buying.
Nice TV though. OLED is far superior to LED.
65EF950V Spec
http://digital-wear.com/dont-buy-a-tv-before-reading-this-ultimate-buying-guide-2016-450/
In fact I have not had any of the issues reported (banding, vignette issues etc.). The TV does suffer if you feed it a poor source (some of the Sky channels are appalling).
Just drop onto AV forums when you get a chance and try to find any TV that is perfect, whether you spend £500 or £5000.
This is an excellent price (I paid £300 less for the 55") for this size screen using OLED technology.
Unfortunately though, it is incredibly susceptible to burn in/ghosting :disappointed: after two months of using it, watching a channel with a white logo in the top right for one-two hours a day and it appears to be there for good :disappointed: tried turning it off and not watching that channel for a few days/usual fixes documented.
Gutted.
The price point is the same(ish), if I was buying I would consider whether a 55B6v offers significantly better image quality/colours over the EF950.
Everyone's preferences will vary - as with yours and mine.
https://flic.kr/p/Jmzddk
As an example