Ran Echelon
Neo Member
I'm thinking of picking up a Sony KDL-40R453C. 40", 1080p, non-smart, £269. Looks pretty decent for the price, anyone got one?
Can anyone recommend me the best tv I can get for 1500? I don't know if I can ask for recommendations here.
Leaning towards Philips since they have ambilight (which is not a gimmick at all, imo).
I'm thinking of picking up a Sony KDL-40R453C. 40", 1080p, non-smart. Looks pretty decent for the price, anyone got one?
Over here in budget-land, I just got my Samsung J6200 set up a week ago and I've been loving it so far. I was afraid that 44ms would be an issue for input lag, but it definitely makes it past my radar. I don't notice it at all. Even if I did, any twitcher games I usually play on PC to begin with.
The only noteworthy flaw is that there's some definite dimming in the corners. This popped up in reviews so I know it's nothing abnormal, and it's only all that noticeable on a solid color background while I'm being OCD and looking for it. I would take this a thousand times over compared to the dirty, checkerboard dimming of the Vizio E series we have in the other room.
It's clearly no OLED, but I'm entirely happy with the black levels. I'm thinking about giving bias lighting a shot to see how that helps. In the meantime, I can just look at my first gen Vita and dream.
How about curved displays for gaming?
Same as watching movies, if you like them and sit directly in front of them no problem if it suites your taste.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6O1WjINTVw
Hehe, I meant that question more in general. Currently I own an old 22" Samsung whatever (I think it already has LED backlight and a resolution of 1920x1080) and I believe that I need a new screen in some time. I definitely do not want a Smart TV since those are annoying as hell (booting for a minute, wtf). However, lately I was wandering through our local electronic store and found those curved screens really interesting. Only aspect which I was worried about, if the picture would be somehow "stretched". But I think it will be difficult to find a curved non-Smartv anyway.
Thanks for the video!
Whether you like it or not all TVs are "Smart TVs" nowadays. I'm not sure where you heard that they take a minute to boot, but that's wrong. They take a few seconds tops.
Hehe, I meant that question more in general. Currently I own an old 22" Samsung whatever (I think it already has LED backlight and a resolution of 1920x1080) and I believe that I need a new screen in some time. I definitely do not want a Smart TV since those are annoying as hell (booting for a minute, wtf). However, lately I was wandering through our local electronic store and found those curved screens really interesting. Only aspect which I was worried about, if the picture would be somehow "stretched". But I think it will be difficult to find a curved non-Smartv anyway.
Thanks for the video!
Whether you like it or not all TVs are "Smart TVs" nowadays. I'm not sure where you heard that they take a minute to boot, but that's wrong. They take a few seconds tops.
That one minute was exaggerated, sorry. But the TV of a friend needs definitely more than "a few seconds" to offer all functions. For example the source selection needs more time to be available.
If it's anything more than like 5 seconds, that TV is likely either defective, using out of date firmware, or very old. I've never used a TV where it took more than a few seconds to be fully up and running.
This has probably been answered numerous times but looking to get a TV this black friday and just wondering if I should go with a 60hz which seems to be significantly cheaper or 120hz. I'm not sure what the difference is, just looking for whats best
Also this wont be just a gaming TV but mainly movies/tv
any samsung earlier than 2013 can have bad capacitor issues that will cause the screen to power cycle over and over again for about 15 - 20 seconds. My 52a650 suffered horribly from it.
120hz pannel are far and away prefered, the biggest benifits include:
Black Frame Insertion (some screens like Sony and Samsung have this that allow for less motion blur). Even without this 120hz screens handle motion blur better in general.
Correct 24fps playback (movies) a 120hz screen can perfectly playback 24fps content by repreating the frame 5 times, where as a 60hz tv cant display correctly so it has to do a 3:2 pulldown. Some people wont notice it.
I cant think of any "good" screens that are 60hz.
One discussion a friend of mine and me have regularly: Why are bigger screens better? I always defend the position that smaller is better, to a certain degree, of course. As I said earlier, I have a 22 inch Samsung TV, I solely use for gaming. He has an 4x inch TV which is also used for movies etc. I am thinking about getting a 32 inch tv now since I would mostly use it to play games and watch a movie here and there. But I would never buy such a big tv, since most games look extremely shitty on them.
Isn't it all about ppi when it comes to gaming? More close pixels create a sharper image.
But I would never buy such a big tv, since most games look extremely shitty on them. Isn't it all about ppi when it comes to gaming? More close pixels create a sharper image.
One discussion a friend of mine and me have regularly: Why are bigger screens better? I always defend the position that smaller is better, to a certain degree, of course. As I said earlier, I have a 22 inch Samsung TV, I solely use for gaming. He has an 4x inch TV which is also used for movies etc. I am thinking about getting a 32 inch tv now since I would mostly use it to play games and watch a movie here and there. But I would never buy such a big tv, since most games look extremely shitty on them.
Isn't it all about ppi when it comes to gaming? More close pixels create a sharper image.
for some of us gaming is about immersion, my 75" is just now reaching the point where I feel engulfed in the game. My 52" was way to small for that. PPI doesnt mean a damn thing if you dont feel immersed by the image being drawn, I need big and high quality to feel that.
Thinking about picking up a Samsung UN55JU7500. Reviews seem good, but I wanted to know if anyone thinks there is a better option at ~ $1,500.00. If you have one, what are your impressions?
$1500 steps you up to a better set even from Samsung, the JS8500, if it's on sale. Its a suhd line set, and it isn't curved.
Hi guys. I'm looking to get a new tv for gaming. I currently have the Sony 32" W654 http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-KDL32W6...ct_top?ie=UTF8.
There's three tv's I'm currently looking at:
the 50" Bravia W807 http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-KDL-50W...s=kdl50w807csu
the 49" 4K KD49X830 http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-KD-49X8...sony+kd49x8307
and the Samsung UE48JU6500 http://www.amazon.co.uk/Samsung-48-I...ung+ue48ju6500 (curved)
I love the colour on my 32" Bravia, and (for me) there's no noticeable lag during multiplayer.
Any advice/opinions on the three above ? Obviously don't want one that gives a worse picture or lag than the 32" Bravia. Thanks.
Will also be spending around 25% of my times watching Sky HD and blurays.
Yeah, budget is around £750, possibly £800 tops. Thanks for the reading material. I was under the impression that Panasonic aren't as good as Sony or Samsung, especially in terms of lag ? I Do love my Bravia, and would have gone straight for a 50" 1080p, but when I saw that you could pick up a 4K for the same sort of price, my mind started wondering. And when I saw the curved Samsung...Your TV got a input lag of about 33ms.
http://www.hdtvtest.co.uk/news/kdl32w653-201310313413.htm
You can compare this number with other models:
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/by-test-results/input-lag
Your price limit appears to be 800£?
Reviews for your tvs:
Bravia W807
https://www.avforums.com/review/sony-kdl-55w805c-w805c-full-hd-1080p-android-tv-review.11817
KD49X830
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/sony/x830c
Samsung UE48JU6500
http://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/samsung/ju6700 (US model has a different number)
Models that could interest you:
https://www.avforums.com/review/samsung-ue55ju6400-uhd-review.11288
http://www.idealo.co.uk/compare/4754276/samsung-ju6400.html
https://www.avforums.com/review/panasonic-tx-50cx700b-review.11286
https://www.avforums.com/review/sony-kd-65x8505c-4k-ultra-hd-tv-review.11902 the 55" is probably over your price limit?
http://www.idealo.co.uk/compare/4779162/sony-kd-55x8509c.html
Hope this gives you a start![]()
I've got the Sony 805 which is the 807 in a different colour, fairly pleased with the picture and lag but the Android OS is a pain (gave up using the built in Netflix App as it kept crashing so have to use the PS3 instead)
Is Android still that bad on the tv? There were rumours that firmware updates were meant to have resolved the issue somewhat. I may be nitpicking but you said "fairly pleased with the picture and lag"; can I ask what issues you have ?
Is Android still that bad on the tv? There were rumours that firmware updates were meant to have resolved the issue somewhat. I may be nitpicking but you said "fairly pleased with the picture and lag"; can I ask what issues you have ?
If smart features are important to you, steer clear of any TV with it.
Does routing your PS4 through an AV reciever increase input lag or no?
Does routing your PS4 through an AV reciever increase input lag or no?
Depends on the receiver. Some have a game mode that will bypass processing that adds lag.
Depends, if your receiver has video processing built in (upscaling) than yes it can, but most have a "pass through" or "game" mode that allows that input to be a strait shot to the monitor out.
I only have a Denon installed right now, and it uses "game mode" under input settings/Video Type.
Yeah, budget is around £750, possibly £800 tops. Thanks for the reading material. I was under the impression that Panasonic aren't as good as Sony or Samsung, especially in terms of lag ? I Do love my Bravia, and would have gone straight for a 50" 1080p, but when I saw that you could pick up a 4K for the same sort of price, my mind started wondering. And when I saw the curved Samsung...
Luckily for me, I'm not really interested in smart features (I don't know if connecting to nas or Netflix counts as smart ?) For the foreseeable future, the main use will be Battlefront multiplayer, and so the lag is really important. In terms of PQ, I'm not expecting to have something that blows my 32" Bravia away, but it would be nice
For as far as I can remember I've always thought that Sonys had the best PQ (some of the Pannys pre 2010 too), that's why I haven't really looked outside of Sony. I've got a 50" W829 in the living room, and that is gorgeous, so I wanted something as good if not better for my gaming room (not asking for much I know).
Oh yeah my reciever doesn't have a video card in it. No video processing. So I guess that means no added lag. Thanks!
Was thinking about plugging my PS4 into my TV directly anyway and then sending audio to my reveiver with my optical cable. I only have 5.1 so it shouldn't reduce any quality anywhere.
Next was the Sony x8505/7c (7= silver bezel / US Sony x850c)
It seems that all of these "entry range" 4K tvs have one kind of a problem or another, the Sony has issues with contrast, and the Samsung has issues with judder, but also lag. If you set the JU6500 into game mode, the lag is low but the PQ is subpar. In any other mode the lag is bad. I may just end up going for the 1080p W8.
Isn't this also a 2014 ips ?
By entry Sony4K you mean the x830c right? They use a IPS panel so blacks and contrast are worst. To bad we don't have the a real comparable model to the US x810c, the EU version the x8005c has only a 50Hz panel and an input lag of 50ms in game mode.
For the Samsung, if you use the TV mainly for games you don't have to worry about any judder (this is a problem with the 24p playback).
The W8c is a very nice TV and I'm sure you'll be satisfied with it, if possible go to your local retailer and take a look for yourself.
Nope they both are 2015 and use a VA panel.
Yeah, with the Samsung, it's the lag I'm really worried about; no point in low lag if the PQ is really bad.
Thanks BlizzyAzz for all the help!
Yes YES YES, its horrible, its easily the worst part of the x940c. Its easily the buggiest, slowest and uglies TV UI I've delt with in modern times. If the TV wasnt so damn good I would have already returned it just for how crappy Android TV is. I have the most recent firmware update (that enabled HDR on the x940c) and if that supposedly brought stability... Jesus Christ it must have been a disaster before. Read the x930/940 owners thread on AVS, not a single person likes Android TV, we all consider it the worst part of the TV and wish sony had gone with anything else. Some of us are even worried its going to shorten the life of the TV as Sony has quietly dropped support for previous TV's running it, leaving them in a state of chaos.
If smart features are important to you, steer clear of any TV with it.
It will reduce quality, you'll lose the ability to have uncompressed 5.1 from the PS4. Go PS4-->Reciever-->Tv, skip the optical at all cost.