Still not made my mind up on a TV, but saw this just now and for the specs I'd be pleased with it. Sadly it's too big for where I need it to go, That and the shed is a tad cold this time of year #IntheDogHouse - Either way it's a nice discount so thought I'd share.
USB - 3 Wall mount support - 400 x 400 mm Scart input - NO! Haha, thought it would be around forever!
Product Overview Make your movie nights epic with this 65 inch Ultra HD certified LED TV from Hisense. Upscaling technology enriches every scene with breath-taking details - whether it’s from a 4K stream or your favourite Blu-rays. HDR technology recreates images in a realistic range of rich colours and contrast – so you can enjoy movies just the way the director intended. Connect to your favourite on demand services with Smart TV features, or catch live TV through Freeview HD, with 70 subscription-free channels including 15 in HD. The 4 HDMI ports let you plug in games consoles and Blu-ray players while 3 USB ports give you the option to connect external drives to see your home movies on the big screen.
All comments (61)
NeoTrix
20 Sep 17#1
This is me dodging plates and cups after telling the wife about the theoretical £500 I just spent on this (Because we always make it sound cheaper when we tell them, right? Everything is discounted further when I tell her :D)
morrig to NeoTrix
20 Sep 17#25
As when she comes in with shoes or handbag and dresses from Primark or the charity shop or sale, with the label conveniently hidden or snipped off,
spenspuma to morrig
21 Sep 17#30
Why are people so scared of their wives? if you want it and it's your money then go buy it...
Unless of course you're one of these mugs who puts all their money into a joint account and then has no control over whats spent.
No scart socket? COLD :grin: But how can a tv be to big? :thinking:
smershspy to Sawb
20 Sep 17#4
Eh?
Sawb to smershspy
20 Sep 17#5
Well uhhhh the op had said this in the desciption "Scart input - NO! Haha, thought it would be around forever!" so i made a joke about that, the op also said the tv is to big for their needs and i joked there is no such thing, i didnt think it was that complicated, but i hadnt quoted anything so ill forgive you
QuickProfits to Sawb
20 Sep 17#16
He said it doesn't fit.
NeoTrix
20 Sep 17#6
"Sawb1 h, 55 m agoNo scart socket? COLD :grin: But how can a tv be to big? :thinking: "
@Sawb It wouldn't fit in the gap I have in the front room, without having to move loads of stuff around, so around 50" is what I was looking for initially.
speedfire66 to NeoTrix
20 Sep 17#11
Yeah it was a joke. You didn’t need to give an explanation.
Drindod2002
20 Sep 17#7
Code also works on 50" @NeoTrix heat added! :thumbsup:
spenspuma
20 Sep 17#9
Remember the saying...buying Hisense makes No sense.
leehardacre to spenspuma
20 Sep 17#10
Absolute tosh. My 55" K700 still impressed all who see it.
pimpchez to leehardacre
21 Sep 17#35
Plus one with my old (2015) K321 . The 4k sat demo channel blows everyones mind thats seen it. a 1080p bluray quality source is very impressive with night time viewing. I might sell mine to my old man and by this but in 50" guise...
DarrylJohn
20 Sep 17#13
I've got the H55M7000. Cracking TV. I'd maybe look at the H65M7000 which is last year's top model.
DCFC79
20 Sep 17#14
Is it worth the money ?
kingkash_786 to DCFC79
20 Sep 17#28
No not really, at that price you could buy an LG or a Samsung TV that has a 10Bit panel, this TV does not have a 10Bit panel it has a 8Bit panel with FRC so if your going to spend £1000 on a TV then look out for a 10Bit one as all the low spec 4k TV's come with 8Bit+FRC which are way cheaper than this
Nut82uk to kingkash_786
24 Sep 17#57
Love the way you put links to back up your claims :sweat_smile:
kingkash_786 to Nut82uk
2 Oct 17#60
https://www.displayspecifications.com/en/model/4562bf8Heres the spec sheet for this TV go through it and see for yourself.
No delivery service.... fancied a holiday to Cornwall anyway
mrb30 to Mahonytekkers
20 Sep 17#17
They offered me pallet delivery for £40. It's a cracker of a tv, 4k HDR looks fantastic
FrugalFergal
20 Sep 17#18
Almost a grand for a telly?! Obligatory - is it HDR10/HDR10+ and have a 10bit panel?
I got my AMAZING top spec 65 inch 4k Samsung KS9000 telly for £1200 with a 5yr warranty thanks to HUKD.
For all those fellas still on the fence mulling what the missus might throw at you when she learns how much you spent on it, worry not. Just wait until she beholds without doubt the finest future of telly/home cinema money can buy.
With the right set up, its insanely impressive. Just stick on 4K Grand Tour, Planet Earth II or any of Netflix's 4K HDR10 content.
I would hate to think anyone paid almost as much for anything less.
So for all else who are looking for their next big telly upgrade, is this Hisense telly a yay or a nay?
mrb30 to FrugalFergal
20 Sep 17#24
Swapped my 55ks9000 as it was bloody awful!
marzy100 to FrugalFergal
21 Sep 17#45
Were did you get this deal from? that's £1200 well spent!
Until a fault arose I had the 65M7000 which was awesome for the money; i'd look more at the 55NU8700 for £1079 as it has over the 1000 NITS and the built in sound bar; great find OP
paulwhitehead66 to Mahonytekkers
20 Sep 17#8
im waiting to see some reviews for the 55nu8700, as it looks great value for a good spec tv
Mahonytekkers to paulwhitehead66
20 Sep 17#22
Frustrating that you can't see them in high street stores but I suppose Panny and Samsung wouldn't be happy with the likes of currys if they started showing them next to compatible sets at 30% cheaper.
morrig to Mahonytekkers
20 Sep 17#26
John Lewis and Richer Sounds have them?
rickryder1 to morrig
29 Sep 17#59
I brought the 65" Hisense 9 months ago with 6 years cover from Richer sounds (£750) feed it a unique to Currys 4K player (PANASONIC
DMP-UB390EB) that turns up on ebay due to being sold as a bundled TV / UHD/BLURAY player combo and the player not being needed so £110 ! then feed that with downloaded (the black pearl ships harbour) 4k content via memory sticks or Hard Drives via USB port on rear of player Visionary Excellence...
Zaid_1133 to Mahonytekkers
21 Sep 17#52
Argos sell Hisense now
Mahonytekkers to Zaid_1133
22 Sep 17#55
Yes but I meant the high street stores dont have them on display for you to view before buying like they do other manufacturers :angry:
B4rT45 to Mahonytekkers
20 Sep 17#12
What was the fault? Was it that bad that you had to buy a new tv?
Mahonytekkers to B4rT45
20 Sep 17#21
My young son decided to throw a full beaker of juice at, the led's didn't like it
musical
20 Sep 17#27
Highly recommend Hisense. I bought the Hisense 49n5700 and for the money, with HDR, Freeview Play, Amazon, Netflix, etc. it is bloody amazing. £454.
DarrylJohn
21 Sep 17#29
All these people banging the same drum. 8bit +FRC isnt end of days you all suggest.
It's not night and day. I'd hazard a guess that alot of people wouldn't notice if side by side showing the same content
psychoid
21 Sep 17#31
i have a question about input lag, if im driving in forza at 70mph how many frames/ feet will i be out of sync? if 1 frame is1/60th of a second i and i'm traveling 100feet per second, how do i find a tv where i know where i am? am i 10 feet from where i think i am? or 50?
zmmaths
21 Sep 17#32
It is good price but not a very attractive deal. A Samsung 65'' MU6500 tv could be had back in the summer for £729ish with Samsung's trade-in promotion, also with 5 year warranty if bought from John Lewis. Apart from curved screen, the two sets are quite similar: 8bit+FRC, 50/60Hz, WCG, Peak brightness 300-400 nits. In particular, with such peak brightness, neither set will do a solid job in HDR. For anyone who cares about HDR and has a healthy budget, I would suggest go for those sets that come with 'UHD Premium' certification. These are obviously not cheap, but some are also with good prices, e.g., Hisense NU8700 as mentioned in earlier posts.
dh12g09 to zmmaths
21 Sep 17#33
Out of interest would you recommend I buy the Hisense NU8700 or a LG OLED55B7
zmmaths to dh12g09
21 Sep 17#42
I think the LG is equally capable if not better with HDR, and probably better with SDR. Barely any review has been done for the Hisense, but as it is Premium UHD certified, I wouldn't worry too much as long as you can calibrate ad hoc. Given the price difference of £700 for 55'' between the two, the Hisense seems better value. Yet as earlier posts suggest, you might want to wait until Black Friday if you are not in a hurry to get a tv, which also gives you some time to wait for a proper review for the Hisense. Another comparable alternative could be the Sony XE90/XE93, and they might reach some nice price points around Black Friday / Christmas.
In my case, I was in a hurry to get a big screen but do not care too much about HDR, so I went for the Samsung I mentioned.
Clarkybull81
21 Sep 17#34
I have the 55inch version of this tv and I'm blown away by the picture quality. One question though how do I turn on HDR or do I need a native 4K source?
Gormond
21 Sep 17#36
Almost a grand for a TV that isn't UHD Premium seems expensive to me. Like the poster above I got my 65 inch Samsung UHD Premium TV for £1200 with 5 year warranty several months ago which still seems like a better deal.
Personally I would hold out for a proper HDR TV, especially with Black Friday just around the corner.
pimpchez to Gormond
21 Sep 17#37
What about people only wanting the 50" at £579 , its a no brainer...
Gormond to pimpchez
21 Sep 17#40
I was referring to the size and price of this. If I was paying £1000 for a 65 inch I would expect better HDR - which to me is more impressive than UHD.
If this was £700 then it would be a different story.
zmmaths to Gormond
21 Sep 17#43
Fair point. The KS series from Samsung last year were extremely good values, apart from light bleeding issues in random panels (typical problem with edge-lit sets). For me, £1000 is too much for a set mediocre in HDR as well, but £700 is certainly a different story, hence the reason why I went for the mediocre Sammy.
tazg101 to Gormond
21 Sep 17#38
Which set did you buy?
Gormond to tazg101
21 Sep 17#39
65ks9000 with no lightbleed issues that some people have reported.
tazg101 to Gormond
21 Sep 17#47
You got a ks9000 65” for 1200 a few months ago. Don’t believe you.
mrb30 to tazg101
21 Sep 17#51
Me too. I paid 1179 for a 55 before I sent it packin
Hotmeal
21 Sep 17#44
Too close to November for my liking to be considering such a purchase. At a guess there will be some good deals now but do I wait for the one in a couple months? :grin:
Wouldn't buy a hisense again, maybe I just had a bad set but the clouding and washed out colours made me send it back.
The new 65nu8700 looks very interesting. John Lewis have them but I've not seen any reviews yet. Specifications are excellent but there's more to it than specs
qwales
21 Sep 17#49
When's someone going to post some similar deals for 70" or above? Want to make a big leap from 55" and 65 just doesn't quite cut it
mark6220
21 Sep 17#50
Take a look at reliant direct. They have a Samsung with almost 1400 off. I've no idea what reliant are like to deal with. I've asked on here but can't get an answer.
Hintza
22 Sep 17#53
Thanks guys, I went completely overboard last night and plumped for the 55NU8700 before the code ran out. Yes I'll be telling the missus it was only £600ish and I have a huge knot in my stomach this morning wondering why the hell I spent almost double my intended budget. :disappointed:
MrDoom to Hintza
2 Oct 17#61
So what is the verdict on the NU8700?
joffa81
24 Sep 17#56
I purchased the 50” version 2 weeks ago and they are hit and miss. The one I got had bad Clouding (DSE) and was replaced. The replacement arrived last Thursday and it’s got horizontal banding along the bottom and middle of the screen. RIcher Sounds are currently deciding if it can be replaced or not as they are saying it could be a limitation of the tv and another replacement may yield the same results. to be honest all these sub £1000 TVs are all about the same with class B panels and uniformity issues that can’t demand top money. On HD content the image is stunning but they are no good for watching sports in particular football due to the clouding and banding issues !!
Opening post
Still not made my mind up on a TV, but saw this just now and for the specs I'd be pleased with it. Sadly it's too big for where I need it to go, That and the shed is a tad cold this time of year #IntheDogHouse - Either way it's a nice discount so thought I'd share.
Main Specs
Resolution - 4K / 3840 x 2160
HDR - 10Bit (8Bits + FCR)
Ethernet - yep
HDMI Input - 4
Wall mount support - 400 x 400 mm
Scart input - NO! Haha, thought it would be around forever!
Product Overview
Make your movie nights epic with this 65 inch Ultra HD certified LED TV from Hisense. Upscaling technology enriches every scene with breath-taking details - whether it’s from a 4K stream or your favourite Blu-rays. HDR technology recreates images in a realistic range of rich colours and contrast – so you can enjoy movies just the way the director intended. Connect to your favourite on demand services with Smart TV features, or catch live TV through Freeview HD, with 70 subscription-free channels including 15 in HD. The 4 HDMI ports let you plug in games consoles and Blu-ray players while 3 USB ports give you the option to connect external drives to see your home movies on the big screen.
All comments (61)
Unless of course you're one of these mugs who puts all their money into a joint account and then has no control over whats spent.
@Sawb It wouldn't fit in the gap I have in the front room, without having to move loads of stuff around, so around 50" is what I was looking for initially.
a 1080p bluray quality source is very impressive with night time viewing. I might sell mine to my old man and by this but in 50" guise...
hbh-woolacotts.co.uk/tv-…02B
Obligatory - is it HDR10/HDR10+ and have a 10bit panel?
I got my AMAZING top spec 65 inch 4k Samsung KS9000 telly for £1200 with a 5yr warranty thanks to HUKD.
For all those fellas still on the fence mulling what the missus might throw at you when she learns how much you spent on it, worry not. Just wait until she beholds without doubt the finest future of telly/home cinema money can buy.
With the right set up, its insanely impressive. Just stick on 4K Grand Tour, Planet Earth II or any of Netflix's 4K HDR10 content.
I would hate to think anyone paid almost as much for anything less.
So for all else who are looking for their next big telly upgrade, is this Hisense telly a yay or a nay?
hotukdeals.com/dea…462
m.costco.co.uk/vie…039
Was it that bad that you had to buy a new tv?
It's not night and day. I'd hazard a guess that alot of people wouldn't notice if side by side showing the same content
if 1 frame is1/60th of a second i and i'm traveling 100feet per second,
how do i find a tv where i know where i am?
am i 10 feet from where i think i am?
or 50?
In my case, I was in a hurry to get a big screen but do not care too much about HDR, so I went for the Samsung I mentioned.
Personally I would hold out for a proper HDR TV, especially with Black Friday just around the corner.
If this was £700 then it would be a different story.
Wouldn't buy a hisense again, maybe I just had a bad set but the clouding and washed out colours made me send it back.
RIcher Sounds are currently deciding if it can be replaced or not as they are saying it could be a limitation of the tv and another replacement may yield the same results.
to be honest all these sub £1000 TVs are all about the same with class B panels and uniformity issues that can’t demand top money. On HD content the image is stunning but they are no good for watching sports in particular football due to the clouding and banding issues !!