I believe this is the cheapest price for this TV, ends Sunday. I've ordered to be delivered on Sunday. Use code TV10 to get 10% off £849 = £764.10 free delivery, with 5 years warranty. Tesco £844.5 Richer sound £849 (6 years warranty) Others £889 or more I wonder if there's any other TV that's better than this one and cheaper? If there is please let me know. I can still cancel my order :smiley:
Top comments
ashmac to ho0da
18 Nov 165#7
love it ... every tv post gets this hahaha
otterboxer
19 Nov 164#13
oh man enough with the bits. I thought Nth degreeing everything was done with. ive been there with other stuff you end up spending most of your time searching and no time using the thing you obsessed over. merry christmas everybody!
All comments (37)
andywedge
18 Nov 161#1
Thanks for posting. I’ve added the price and merchant to the title.
Here’s a ‘Help’ link which gives tips and advice on thread posting.
ronzza
18 Nov 16#2
Thanks mod :smiley:
ReflexReact
18 Nov 16#3
Hotter than my melted Raspberry Pi I just took out of the oven
I was right though and hopefully stopped people who are after a 10 bit from buying it
Grimlocked
18 Nov 16#9
Garbage post.
rabaz786 to Grimlocked
19 Nov 161#10
Come on man, atleast he's made an effort...
chocci to Grimlocked
19 Nov 161#16
Lol, let's have some more Princess Snow and the Unicorn childrens book deals instead
What a plonker
j2hot
19 Nov 161#11
any idea what TVs this code works on? tried it on a £850 LG and it didn't work. Annoying that Curry's make you fill in everything before you can try a code...
crumpo
19 Nov 161#12
This is definitely the cheapest 4k HDR tv in the "good" range, but at this point you are a week away from the biggest electronics sale of the year. I wager you will get a 10 bit panel for a price very close to this on BF, which would be a much better deal.
otterboxer
19 Nov 164#13
oh man enough with the bits. I thought Nth degreeing everything was done with. ive been there with other stuff you end up spending most of your time searching and no time using the thing you obsessed over. merry christmas everybody!
brendinho
19 Nov 16#14
excellent!! cheers!!
fr3dy77_sp33d
19 Nov 16#15
lol. take a look at his own post and you will laugh
joshyjoseph
19 Nov 16#17
code is TV10
amz84uk
19 Nov 161#18
Go via quidco too for a further 10% cashback. I'm not sure if it will work when using a voucher code, but worth a try.
garybb
19 Nov 16#19
Do people no realise HDR works perfectly fine on a 8 bit Tv.
Good price have some heat.
afroylnt to garybb
19 Nov 161#20
but it works even better on a good 10 bit; it all depends on how quickly you need a Tv. I would personally prefer to wait for a decent 10 bit (given that I keep Tvs for at least 5 years) and also for more HDR content to be available...
voodooboard to garybb
19 Nov 161#26
This TV has no local dimming whatsoever. HDR is close to pointless with such TVs. I will explain in more detail if someone disagrees or wants an explanation.
I'm not saying there is anything wrong with the TV. I'm just saying if you are all hyped up about getting into the HDR experience...this TV is not for you.
TV manufacturers have no qualms about selling something that says it does something...but from a technical perspective is really not capable.
garybb
19 Nov 161#21
Yeah 10 bit would work much better that's for sure. I have done some testing on gears of war 4 and even though my 4k tv is only a 8 bit panel the difference is stunning with HDR enabled. I'm just pointing out that all is not lost if you go for a cheaper 4k 8 bit :smiley:
Tried that earlier but code wasn't valid. Did it work for you?
gamblor
19 Nov 16#23
The daily struggle continues. I had just convinced myself to wait until CES and make do with a cheaper 1080p set for another year or so. Then this rocks up.
And just to stir the pot, Rtings also thought this was an 8bit panel but then corrected themselves.
Please explain. I have this telly and the 4k content looks amazing.
j2hot
19 Nov 161#29
4k and HDR aren't the same thing, you can have one without the other. Unless you have a HDR source (4K blu ray player, Ps4 Pro or X Box One S) then you're watching 4K but not HDR.
ho0da
19 Nov 16#30
That's a different model
discoman2016
19 Nov 16#31
sorry code no work try CODE TVS10 AT ARGOS to save 10% off tvs over £299
jaydeeuk1
19 Nov 16#32
8 bit HDR? Is that what call an oxymoron?
voodooboard
19 Nov 161#33
In simple terms, HDR is basically the capability for brighter brights. Both on the display side, and on grading/master/delivery side.
However the intent is for only small portions of the frame to be intensely bright. You don't actually want the entire screen to be beaming 1000 nits at you because that would be very uncomfortable. The intent is for small areas - maybe the sun, maybe a flame, maybe the glint on a sword etc - to be very bright. But the overall average brightness of the entire frame should not be much different to SDR.
The problem as this pertains to standard LCD sets (with a single uniform backlight) is that if you crank up the backlight to 1000 nits in order to make one object on screen very bright, you make everything else washed out. It's unavoidable due to the transmissive nature of LCD sets. The dynamic range is not increased, you are simply moving it so your bright and dark tones are both much higher than before.
The solution is a local dimming display with many dimming zones. This TV is not one of those. It has a single uniform backlight. Being honest, even mid-range local dimming displays with 100 odd zones are not enough. You need something crazy high-end with thousands of zones to do justice to HDR. Or preferably and OLED panel where every pixel supplies it's own illumination.
Disco Dave
19 Nov 16#34
I own this tv
gamblor
19 Nov 16#35
I believe it's the US name for this version. If not, can you pick out the US name from the Rtings site? Would be good to see what they have to say about it.
Cheers
Grimlocked
19 Nov 16#36
Ha!
kaiser051
20 Nov 16#37
not exactly true as an 8 bit panel cannot process a HDR signal it will take the signal and try to match as close as it can minus a few million less colours using some clever dimming and other effects but it wont be displaying a HDR signal it will accept the HDR signal and play it as SDR with those clever tweaks and effects to improve the colours slightly
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Here’s a ‘Help’ link which gives tips and advice on thread posting.
http://www.displayspecifications.com/en/model/0d686a2
What a plonker
Good price have some heat.
I'm not saying there is anything wrong with the TV. I'm just saying if you are all hyped up about getting into the HDR experience...this TV is not for you.
TV manufacturers have no qualms about selling something that says it does something...but from a technical perspective is really not capable.
And just to stir the pot, Rtings also thought this was an 8bit panel but then corrected themselves.
Rtings
Heat added. Mind befuddled. Patience diminished.
You zinged the wrong person.
What a plonker.
However the intent is for only small portions of the frame to be intensely bright. You don't actually want the entire screen to be beaming 1000 nits at you because that would be very uncomfortable. The intent is for small areas - maybe the sun, maybe a flame, maybe the glint on a sword etc - to be very bright. But the overall average brightness of the entire frame should not be much different to SDR.
The problem as this pertains to standard LCD sets (with a single uniform backlight) is that if you crank up the backlight to 1000 nits in order to make one object on screen very bright, you make everything else washed out. It's unavoidable due to the transmissive nature of LCD sets. The dynamic range is not increased, you are simply moving it so your bright and dark tones are both much higher than before.
The solution is a local dimming display with many dimming zones. This TV is not one of those. It has a single uniform backlight. Being honest, even mid-range local dimming displays with 100 odd zones are not enough. You need something crazy high-end with thousands of zones to do justice to HDR. Or preferably and OLED panel where every pixel supplies it's own illumination.
Cheers