Lowest price at the moment code TV15 to save 15% on this great tv other retailers may price match.Bask in the incredible colour-rich realism of the 4K HDR OLED picture with LG's B7. An astonishingly thin OLED panel, pin-sharp 4K UHD resolution, and a stunning HDR colour-scape combine for a simply awe-inspiring picture. Dolby Vision achieves contrast and colour that will blow you away, while Dolby Atmos sound provides truly immersive audio. Use LG’s award-winning webOS 3.5 Smart platform to stream shows from such apps as Netflix, the intuitive Magic Remote to navigate, and add a hyper-modern touch of class to your living room with its Blade Slim picture-on-metal design. With spectacular visuals and audio, the B7 will revolutionise your home entertainment.
Impeccable 4K OLED for Perfect Black, Perfect Colour Fusing OLED tech with 4K resolution, this set’s contrast, colour and clarity make viewing simply one-of-a-kind. OLED pixels are self-lighting, meaning that they can switch on-and-off individually to conjure inky blacks and super-bright whites. Unlike regular 3 colour pixels (RGB) in LED screens, LG’s panel has 4 colour pixels (WRGB) with an added white sub-pixel. This delivers ultra-fine colour gradation and a colour palette that’s virtually true-to-life. With 33 million of these pixels, this 4K OLED set is a majesty to behold, achieving perfect black, perfect colour and perfect clarity.
OLED HDR with Dolby Vision LG are one of the forerunners of colour-boosting High Dynamic Range (HDR). As members of the UHD Alliance, they've delivered top-shelf OLED HDR with a staggering 10-bit colour depth. This means that there are over a billion individual colours to deepen your view and show shades you’ve never seen in home entertainment before. Usually, studios are forced to dilute the colour of their shows and films to fit on our TVs. Now, HDR screens like the B7 can channel content from studio-to-living room with the same precision and utterly otherworldly hues. Better yet, the B7 is one of the few sets to be compatible with Dolby Vision content – a special standard that loads on even more mind-blowing colour and contrast. This set also features Multi HDR support and Active HDR so whatever entertainment you're enjoying, you'll always get the full, glorious HDR treatment with pin-point accuracy.
Latest comments (57)
jaheermk
11 Aug 17#57
why did i think this would last a couple weeks.... what i get for sleeping on it
jaydeeuk1
7 Aug 17#31
3d died because it launched on crappy 1080p sets and manufacturers needed a new gimmick to sell even when not ready. If it launched now it would take off on these high end sets.
MSK. to jaydeeuk1
7 Aug 17#35
3D will never take off because half the population can't even see it.
I'm glad it worked out for you, but taking a company to the small claims court vs having a warranty is a world more hassle.
jayjayuk1234 to MSK.
7 Aug 17#36
Of course, but ideally it shouldn't come to that if retailers and consumers alike knew the law
I got the full value of my TV reimbursed, John Lewis will deduct value every year you have had the TV for wear and tear.
rickj to jayjayuk1234
7 Aug 17#39
Just simply NOT TRUE..My Sammy plasma packed in nearly 4 years in .JL sent a engineer who said it needed a new panel and it would cost more than purchase price .As soon as they had the report they phoned me and refunded the FULL PURCHASE PRICE .Never mentioned any wear and tear .
Completely agree. If the standard now was the standard at the start of the 3d revolution people would be all over it. They've chosen to drop it at a time when, quality wise, it is at its peak. Shame.
jayjayuk1234 to SpringHeeledJim
8 Aug 17#50
It;s obvious, they will bring i back again when it's even better to sell more TV's
loadsavmoney to jayjayuk1234
8 Aug 17#56
yeah, i think 3D will come back without glasses too, that's an issue most people have with 3D, having to wear the glasses :sunglasses:
loadsavmoney
8 Aug 17#55
I have a C6 with image retention that's not going away :disappointed: i've tried clearing noise but it did nothing it's slightly visible on a yellow screen and very noticeable on a red screen, i noticed it a week ago
FunkiestMonkey
7 Aug 17#44
People who can't afford this mid price TV. Get a better job or stop moaning.
Justsuperman to FunkiestMonkey
8 Aug 17#48
This isn’t a mid class.. it’s classed as ultra high these are the best of the best mate
ThePennyPincher to Justsuperman
8 Aug 17#51
It's under £2,000, in what word is that best of the best? :joy:
Justsuperman to ThePennyPincher
8 Aug 17#52
It’s OLED it’s the best doesn’t matter that’s it’s under £2k it’s expired now it retails for more than £2k but that’s besides the point OLED shits on lcd and is the best of the best screen tech.
FunkiestMonkey to Justsuperman
8 Aug 17#53
I never said it was mid class. I said mid price.
Justsuperman to FunkiestMonkey
8 Aug 17#54
Indeed
MattyGr
8 Aug 17#47
The LG E7 is quite a bit better, worth paying the extra for. Expect the price to drop over the next few months so worth holding out for.
Bigfootpete
8 Aug 17#46
Very nice, and here was me thinking that Argos only sold the cheaper versions of tv's rather than the premium ones.
apexialdesigns
7 Aug 17#43
I bought the 55C6 curved at the weekend. It has 3D and down to £1500 at Richer Sounds and Fenwicks Newcastle. Excellent telly. Flat model was at around £2200.
Would imagine JL Would want a like for like warranty. Paying nearly 2k for a 1 year warranty TV is a complete no no irrespective of any EU law.
jayjayuk1234 to rickj
7 Aug 17#14
These guarantees are pretty pointless, Uk Consumer Contract Regulations trumps the EU Law in this area anyway.
The retailer can be liable for up to 6 years, and you would expect a 2k TV to last for a good 5 years before developing faults, if the retailer Argos refused to rectify the issue you can get the TV repaired by another company and take them to small claims court to pay for the legal fees and the repair.
MSK. to jayjayuk1234
7 Aug 17#18
Have you ever tried arguing that with Argos though? I tried it with a different product. They asked for an engineers report or the manufacturer authorisation code which confirms the fault. Manufacturer said no such codes exist and Argos all for codes all the time to get out of their responsibilities.
So I got the manufacturers to confirm in writing the product was faulty instead and forwarded it to Argos. They told me they would not help despite having evidence from the manufacturer and to take it up with the manager in store.
If you can claim under EU law, you're a much better negotiator than me. Even if you win, you will probably only get a percentage of the money back. After all that stress is rather have a warranty in writing.
jayjayuk1234 to MSK.
7 Aug 17#32
Yes, i have in fact claimed for a TV funnily enough, but not Argos. It was Comet
Doesn't need to be a defect at manufacture, just goods supplied not fit for purpose, my TV failed after 2 years and the warranty was 1 year. I asked them to repair, they refused so i got it repaired independently then took the company to small claims and won.
As i said, if Argos refuse no need to keep arguing with them, their customer service don't seem to realise they have responsibilities outside of their 12 month warranty period, just take them to small claims court and it's usually judged in your favour, unless you have tampered with it or some other reason why the TV failed such as improper use or the like.
It's not EU law i would claim under now, its our very own Consumer Contract Regulations which superceded the Sale of Goods Act and is superior to the EU Law on his matter as i said above.
rickj to jayjayuk1234
7 Aug 17#37
You have kind of proved my point.If you think argos will simply refund nearly 2k in year 4 without a word then fill your boots ,spouting a UK law probably won't get your refund either. You need to prove it had a fault when you originally purchased it and likely a small claims court . OR. Simply pay a bit more with likes of Jl,Richer sounds and sleep easy for 5 years .Life too short chasing retailers through the courts. Even sharks like Curry's now have 5 years on certain TVs
jayjayuk1234 to rickj
7 Aug 17#38
Sorry, but you don't need to prove item had a fault at delivery, If it fails prematurely it can be deemed not fit for purpose AND if the retailer refuses to repair, THEN you can take to court and get a refund. You have to give them a chance to repair the item.
I wouldn't dream of purchasing an expensive TV from Argos, but if i was unfortunate enough to and it failed that;s what i'll do.
And Currys now have 5 years because they are fully aware that they can be taken to small claims court and lose every time.
Also, you make it sound like small claims court is some long winded drawn out affair like an Oscar Pistorius trial or something, it's all done online, easy peasy
rickj to jayjayuk1234
7 Aug 17#41
More like they were getting left behind in sales .They clearly haven't read the law as 5 years warranty is on a select few not full range. I've better things to do than chase a retailer through small claims court because if you win they might not still pay ....hence the programme Here come the sheriffs .Chasing up small claims non payment .And that costs you more money as well .By that time you have probably wasted a year of your time :cry: :cry:
jayjayuk1234 to rickj
7 Aug 17#42
I enjoy watching that program, and you;re right that a lot of the companies are chancers, but i doubt Argos would put up a fuss, the Sheriffs would have a field day at an Argos branch :grin:
I think a point has been missed here, being HUKD. John Lewis and Richer Sounds are more expensive usually, and if you're buying an Argos TV you are usually doing so because it's a bargain.
Case and point, this TV is £2,249.00 at John Lewis
leeksausage
7 Aug 17#30
Got the C6 a few months back and im thrilled.
Would highly recommend these OLEDs to anyone interested.
Only downside is that LG's WebOS isnt great, Android TV (now the issues have been ironed out) is miles better.
HEAT
Xtrykyr to leeksausage
7 Aug 17#34
Yeah, the lg web is pretty lacklustre. But if the tv itself had a bigger memory, perhaps the internet in the web would run more fluid and be more worth it.
Xtrykyr
7 Aug 17#33
In my personal opinion, this is a bit too pricey. But OLED is worth it. OLED+4K is definitely worth it. For a price of about £1,500. A price like this, I'd expect a 65 inch as opposed to 55.
SpringHeeledJim
7 Aug 17#4
Good deal, I just wish they'd stuck with a 3D option. I have the E6 from last year and the 3D is amazing.
vig1lante to SpringHeeledJim
7 Aug 17#6
3D is pretty much dying/dead now, esecially with cinemas starting to drop it and less and less TV's featuring it these days, which is a dispointment to me.
DontRun to vig1lante
7 Aug 17#7
This is dissappointing to me also, they have dropped 3D from all this year's OLED sets and didn't include it on last year's B6. I would have bought either the B6 or B7 by now if they had 3D as that's the only thing stopping me from buying one.
Can't justify the expense of last year's E6 just to get 3D as it's not worth paying that much more extra just for 3D, especially when I don't want the built in sound bar which is where most of the extra cost is going
malachi to DontRun
7 Aug 17#19
All the major TV manufactures announced at the start of the year they have officially drop 3D. It was a useless piece of tech hardily no body wanted or used.
DontRun to malachi
7 Aug 17#24
Well some people must want or use 3D as 3 people have already commented on this post in support of it and there's a petition for LG to bring back 3D on their OLED TV's with over 12k signatures so far change.org/p/l…del
I would do if it wasn't curved :disappointed:
mb1357 to DontRun
7 Aug 17#27
LG have changed panel specs on 2017 models hence no manufacturers will do 3D with OLED; they sell millions of panels , such a petition is irrelevant
DontRun to mb1357
7 Aug 17#28
I'm not saying they will do it (I personally don't think they will), but there is definately a market for it and people who still want 3D in their home.
LG will change panel specs every year (they're not going to release panels with the same specs as the previous year), so i don't really see why this is relevant
loadsavmoney to SpringHeeledJim
7 Aug 17#29
i've got a C6 that i've had since november and i still havn't properly used 3D :sunglasses: i tested it with Wipeout HD on the PS3 but it didn't look right, the hud was impressive but the gameplay seemed off
Bonoman27
7 Aug 17#26
That's a Curry's only model I believe so unlikely anyone else will have stock to price match against. Shame as like you I would prefer the black bezel over silver. Just checked the Curry's website and it says they price match against Argos including vouchers so it may be possible to get Curry's to price match and see if they are willing to do it against the C model instead but given they want £2499 for the 'C' it's unlikely. Let me know if you give it a go and it works though
Bonoman27
7 Aug 17#1
Great deal, thanks OP. I have asked John Lewis to price match as would prefer the 5 year warranty, fingers crossed!
xfilian to Bonoman27
7 Aug 17#8
Let us know if they agree to price match as I will try as well! Thanks.
Bonoman27 to xfilian
7 Aug 17#10
Heard back from them with a decline as Argos told them the price was the same as theirs. Have gone back to them with a screenshot of the Argos checkout with the code applied (I did inform them of the voucher in the initial request) to see if that might change their mind. Will let you know what they come back with
Bonoman27 to Bonoman27
7 Aug 17#16
John Lewis came back to said they won't price match with the voucher code unless the code is displayed on the product page which this isn't. Oh well was worth a shot. Torn now as I have £250 in Argos vouchers sat around which brings the price down nicely but it's just only getting a 12 month warranty from Argos puts me off.
glennhoward007 to Bonoman27
7 Aug 17#17
will RS price match with Argos with the code? Might be worth a try
collectorcol to glennhoward007
7 Aug 17#25
Nope. RS won't match Argos due to crappy warranty offered by Argos.
InfinitePrime
7 Aug 17#20
I've got this television arriving on Thursday on a price match with John Lewis for £2,029. Should I maintain this with the 5 year warranty or go for this instead?
JasperL to InfinitePrime
7 Aug 17#22
Where did you find this for £2,029 that JL would accept the price match? I've also bought from JL recently...
InfinitePrime to JasperL
7 Aug 17#23
Total Digital had a flash sale on a weekend about 3 weeks ago where the television was on sale for £1999 + £30 delivery.
GJB1984
7 Aug 17#21
I bought this for £2500 only two weeks ago from Currys. :disappointed:
Really good TV but there is so little 4k content around right now. And tbh the jump from HD to 4k is nothing like from SD to HD. But still, a really good TV.
Justsuperman
7 Aug 17#15
I have the b6 and it truly crushes any tv out there OLED is seriously a sight for sore eyes can bet that b7 is even better more nits ect
moliv3r
7 Aug 17#13
I ain't got no £2000 to be spending on a TV
rog
7 Aug 17#12
£1,911.65 for a Tv :fearful: Ide expect it to cook clean and take out the dog for that price! Crazy money :grin:
plumberman56
7 Aug 17#9
Grab a 55 C6 if you can. RS may have a few left? and has 3d
Magister
7 Aug 17#5
But does it improve the quality of the programmes?
fcuk
7 Aug 17#3
Will hang till between 15-£1700, always worked out for me, let all the 2 thousandners+ buy for now, feels good when it's decent price not a littte tiny discount
ScotlandtheDave
7 Aug 17#2
Tempting indeed! Interested in your price match outcome please
Opening post
Impeccable 4K OLED for Perfect Black, Perfect Colour
Fusing OLED tech with 4K resolution, this set’s contrast, colour and clarity make viewing simply one-of-a-kind. OLED pixels are self-lighting, meaning that they can switch on-and-off individually to conjure inky blacks and super-bright whites. Unlike regular 3 colour pixels (RGB) in LED screens, LG’s panel has 4 colour pixels (WRGB) with an added white sub-pixel. This delivers ultra-fine colour gradation and a colour palette that’s virtually true-to-life. With 33 million of these pixels, this 4K OLED set is a majesty to behold, achieving perfect black, perfect colour and perfect clarity.
OLED HDR with Dolby Vision
LG are one of the forerunners of colour-boosting High Dynamic Range (HDR). As members of the UHD Alliance, they've delivered top-shelf OLED HDR with a staggering 10-bit colour depth. This means that there are over a billion individual colours to deepen your view and show shades you’ve never seen in home entertainment before. Usually, studios are forced to dilute the colour of their shows and films to fit on our TVs. Now, HDR screens like the B7 can channel content from studio-to-living room with the same precision and utterly otherworldly hues. Better yet, the B7 is one of the few sets to be compatible with Dolby Vision content – a special standard that loads on even more mind-blowing colour and contrast. This set also features Multi HDR support and Active HDR so whatever entertainment you're enjoying, you'll always get the full, glorious HDR treatment with pin-point accuracy.
Latest comments (57)
I'm glad it worked out for you, but taking a company to the small claims court vs having a warranty is a world more hassle.
I got the full value of my TV reimbursed, John Lewis will deduct value every year you have had the TV for wear and tear.
hotukdeals.com/dis…815
i've tried clearing noise but it did nothing
it's slightly visible on a yellow screen and very noticeable on a red screen, i noticed it a week ago
Fenwicks 5yr warranty. Richer Sounds 6 years.
m.richersounds.com/
Paying nearly 2k for a 1 year warranty TV is a complete no no irrespective of any EU law.
The retailer can be liable for up to 6 years, and you would expect a 2k TV to last for a good 5 years before developing faults, if the retailer Argos refused to rectify the issue you can get the TV repaired by another company and take them to small claims court to pay for the legal fees and the repair.
So I got the manufacturers to confirm in writing the product was faulty instead and forwarded it to Argos. They told me they would not help despite having evidence from the manufacturer and to take it up with the manager in store.
If you can claim under EU law, you're a much better negotiator than me. Even if you win, you will probably only get a percentage of the money back. After all that stress is rather have a warranty in writing.
Doesn't need to be a defect at manufacture, just goods supplied not fit for purpose, my TV failed after 2 years and the warranty was 1 year. I asked them to repair, they refused so i got it repaired independently then took the company to small claims and won.
As i said, if Argos refuse no need to keep arguing with them, their customer service don't seem to realise they have responsibilities outside of their 12 month warranty period, just take them to small claims court and it's usually judged in your favour, unless you have tampered with it or some other reason why the TV failed such as improper use or the like.
It's not EU law i would claim under now, its our very own Consumer Contract Regulations which superceded the Sale of Goods Act and is superior to the EU Law on his matter as i said above.
You need to prove it had a fault when you originally purchased it and likely a small claims court .
OR.
Simply pay a bit more with likes of Jl,Richer sounds and sleep easy for 5 years .Life too short chasing retailers through the courts.
Even sharks like Curry's now have 5 years on certain TVs
I wouldn't dream of purchasing an expensive TV from Argos, but if i was unfortunate enough to and it failed that;s what i'll do.
And Currys now have 5 years because they are fully aware that they can be taken to small claims court and lose every time.
Also, you make it sound like small claims court is some long winded drawn out affair like an Oscar Pistorius trial or something, it's all done online, easy peasy
I've better things to do than chase a retailer through small claims court because if you win they might not still pay ....hence the programme Here come the sheriffs .Chasing up small claims non payment .And that costs you more money as well .By that time you have probably wasted a year of your time :cry: :cry:
I think a point has been missed here, being HUKD. John Lewis and Richer Sounds are more expensive usually, and if you're buying an Argos TV you are usually doing so because it's a bargain.
Case and point, this TV is £2,249.00 at John Lewis
Would highly recommend these OLEDs to anyone interested.
Only downside is that LG's WebOS isnt great, Android TV (now the issues have been ironed out) is miles better.
HEAT
Can't justify the expense of last year's E6 just to get 3D as it's not worth paying that much more extra just for 3D, especially when I don't want the built in sound bar which is where most of the extra cost is going
I would do if it wasn't curved :disappointed:
LG will change panel specs every year (they're not going to release panels with the same specs as the previous year), so i don't really see why this is relevant
i tested it with Wipeout HD on the PS3 but it didn't look right, the hud was impressive but the gameplay seemed off
Really good TV but there is so little 4k content around right now. And tbh the jump from HD to 4k is nothing like from SD to HD.
But still, a really good TV.
a littte tiny discount