Hisense H55M6600 55" Smart 4K Ultra HD with HDR Curved TV for £699 AMAZON
55" Curved 4K UHD Television. With 4 times the resolution of Full HD TV’s, 4K UHD TV can deliver amazing picture quality, accurate detail and vibrant colors. Everything you watch looks 4 x sharper than Full HD. 4K UHD makes every pixel come to life and displays the real world like you have never seen before. Become captivated in the breath taking curve of UHD. The ultra slim design makes it a stylish choice. Design meets function with the Hisense H55M6600 Curved 4K TV.
Top comments
cutthroat_jake
30 Oct 163#3
"HDR Compatible" whatever that means?
Big Differences in HDR Performance
Unfortunately, though, what we've found so far in our labs is that while some HDR-capable TVs produce super-bright, colorful HDR images, others don’t. How can this be? Well, some televisions have the hardware to really take full advantage of HDR. Others can only read the HDR metadata, which is the information embedded in the digital signal that tells the TV how the image should be displayed. These sets, which are being called "HDR-capable" or "HDR-compatible," then try to accommodate the instructions as best they can, based on the TV's capabilities.
Brightness, for example, is a big challenge. Top-performing TVs with HDR can hit anywhere from 500 to 1,000 nits, the unit used to measure brightness. But some so-called "HDR-compatible" TVs can only produce 100 to 300 nits, so they don't have the headroom to produce the peak levels of brightness required for HDR. As a result, we have some TVs in our labs that use the acronym HDR in their packaging, but that don’t look much different from standard dynamic range sets.
Apoligies if ive missed anything,im stuck in work and posted this via mobile just thought it might appeal to some people as it seems cheaper than elsewhere £799 @ A.O and Ebay before any codes
Unfortunately, though, what we've found so far in our labs is that while some HDR-capable TVs produce super-bright, colorful HDR images, others don’t. How can this be? Well, some televisions have the hardware to really take full advantage of HDR. Others can only read the HDR metadata, which is the information embedded in the digital signal that tells the TV how the image should be displayed. These sets, which are being called "HDR-capable" or "HDR-compatible," then try to accommodate the instructions as best they can, based on the TV's capabilities.
Brightness, for example, is a big challenge. Top-performing TVs with HDR can hit anywhere from 500 to 1,000 nits, the unit used to measure brightness. But some so-called "HDR-compatible" TVs can only produce 100 to 300 nits, so they don't have the headroom to produce the peak levels of brightness required for HDR. As a result, we have some TVs in our labs that use the acronym HDR in their packaging, but that don’t look much different from standard dynamic range sets.
Your right it depends on your budget really i want a 10 bit panel myself but i know il.have to pay double this at least for a 55 inch 10 bit screen its all down to what your willing to spend and what your requirements are
ikduncan
30 Oct 16#5
pretty sure the h55m7000 from hisense is 10bit and 55" for "£799"
fishmaster
30 Oct 16#6
HDR means nothing in relation to this TV. A feature improperly implemented is a useless feature.
m1c88
30 Oct 16#7
looking to get new telly any good this?
gr8h8me to m1c88
30 Oct 16#8
You get what you pay for. I would go OLED its the tech of the future. Not these TV's
polarbaba
30 Oct 16#9
I've got so confused especially with some TVs having a genuine 10bit panel but then having a processing unit that's 8+2 which defeats the purpose as its designed for 8bit panels essentially.
this leaves me in a bind.
I've been looking for a 55" TV for a month or two now budget of around 1200 and reviews leave me with no clear answer.
I understand that I will not get any perfect TV for that budget but I expect a decent enough picture at least that makes me glad I didn't pay 400 pounds for a cheap one!.
I did look at the hisense 7000 series and they seem functional.albeit expensive compared to everyone else given that they are not Sony, LG or Samsung where you have to pay a hundred or two for the label.
anyone got any suggestions.
main uses will be TV, movies and ps4. SD and HD sources.
Opening post
55" Curved 4K UHD Television. With 4 times the resolution of Full HD TV’s, 4K UHD TV can deliver amazing picture quality, accurate detail and vibrant colors. Everything you watch looks 4 x sharper than Full HD. 4K UHD makes every pixel come to life and displays the real world like you have never seen before. Become captivated in the breath taking curve of UHD. The ultra slim design makes it a stylish choice. Design meets function with the Hisense H55M6600 Curved 4K TV.
Top comments
Big Differences in HDR Performance
Unfortunately, though, what we've found so far in our labs is that while some HDR-capable TVs produce super-bright, colorful HDR images, others don’t. How can this be? Well, some televisions have the hardware to really take full advantage of HDR. Others can only read the HDR metadata, which is the information embedded in the digital signal that tells the TV how the image should be displayed. These sets, which are being called "HDR-capable" or "HDR-compatible," then try to accommodate the instructions as best they can, based on the TV's capabilities.
Brightness, for example, is a big challenge. Top-performing TVs with HDR can hit anywhere from 500 to 1,000 nits, the unit used to measure brightness. But some so-called "HDR-compatible" TVs can only produce 100 to 300 nits, so they don't have the headroom to produce the peak levels of brightness required for HDR. As a result, we have some TVs in our labs that use the acronym HDR in their packaging, but that don’t look much different from standard dynamic range sets.
SOURCE: http://www.consumerreports.org/lcd-led-oled-tvs/what-is-an-hdr-tv-and-should-i-get-one/
All comments (21)
https://hisense.co.uk/electronics/tvs/h55m6600
Big Differences in HDR Performance
Unfortunately, though, what we've found so far in our labs is that while some HDR-capable TVs produce super-bright, colorful HDR images, others don’t. How can this be? Well, some televisions have the hardware to really take full advantage of HDR. Others can only read the HDR metadata, which is the information embedded in the digital signal that tells the TV how the image should be displayed. These sets, which are being called "HDR-capable" or "HDR-compatible," then try to accommodate the instructions as best they can, based on the TV's capabilities.
Brightness, for example, is a big challenge. Top-performing TVs with HDR can hit anywhere from 500 to 1,000 nits, the unit used to measure brightness. But some so-called "HDR-compatible" TVs can only produce 100 to 300 nits, so they don't have the headroom to produce the peak levels of brightness required for HDR. As a result, we have some TVs in our labs that use the acronym HDR in their packaging, but that don’t look much different from standard dynamic range sets.
SOURCE: http://www.consumerreports.org/lcd-led-oled-tvs/what-is-an-hdr-tv-and-should-i-get-one/
this leaves me in a bind.
I've been looking for a 55" TV for a month or two now budget of around 1200 and reviews leave me with no clear answer.
I understand that I will not get any perfect TV for that budget but I expect a decent enough picture at least that makes me glad I didn't pay 400 pounds for a cheap one!.
I did look at the hisense 7000 series and they seem functional.albeit expensive compared to everyone else given that they are not Sony, LG or Samsung where you have to pay a hundred or two for the label.
anyone got any suggestions.
main uses will be TV, movies and ps4. SD and HD sources.
cheers.