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I bought this TV this weekend (we dont have micro center but had a price match locally) and its fantastic. While there is ANOTHER model the 55EC9300, this TV has better colors (panel is not as good). This is the steal of the decade.
Holy crap I wish my TV room didn't need 65"+. I'd take this over a 4K LCD any day of the week.
$1999 in St. Louis, MO as well.
Holy crap I wish my TV room didn't need 65"+. I'd take this over a 4K LCD any day of the week.
I can tell you from experience since I have one of these. The screen is VERY reflective and I have a well let living room with a wall of windows... but the curve in some way stops them from being an issue.. Cant really explain it, but it does seem to have a purpose. My previous flat TV sometimes during the day i couldnt even make out what was on the screen.. That has been fixed by this curve.
And know that this tv has a small curve... not like the 4k samsungs you see in the store, its very slight.
at this size its been stated many times, 4k will not do you any good.
Does anyone here actually own a 4K television? It makes a difference. I would NEVER spend this much on a 1080p screen. OLED or not...
Well this deal isn't for you then.
Well played...
My point being that if you buy a good quality 4K, then upscaling factors in. Laugh at that statement if you want, but it's true. I have a 65 inch Samsung 4K and previous content that I've watched on 1080p looks incredible. Sports? Holy Crap! I realize 65 is larger than 55, but depending on the size of the room and viewing distance, they can be compared. Perhaps there isn't a good 4K deal out there that gives you everything this does plus the resolution, but it's right around the corner. Either way, 2k for a 1080p seems like too much...jmo
Well played...
My point being that if you buy a good quality 4K, then upscaling factors in. Laugh at that statement if you want, but it's true. I have a 65 inch Samsung 4K and previous content that I've watched on 1080p looks incredible. Sports? Holy Crap! I realize 65 is larger than 55, but depending on the size of the room and viewing distance, they can be compared. Perhaps there isn't a good 4K deal out there that gives you everything this does plus the resolution, but it's right around the corner. Either way, 2k for a 1080p seems like too much...jmo
If anything, this makes me think the Black Friday/Cyber Monday deals are going to be insane.
I bought a 70" 4k vizio, 1080p content looks no different than on a 1080p tv (some 4k tv's actually hurt 1080p content). I spent literally hours upon hours of time at best buy and costco with my mac playing bluray rips on all the tvs I was looking at. LG 4k tvs are crap in comparison to the Samsungs and Vizio 70" (their scalers seemed to make stuff really blurry), the samsungs and the vizio 70" have fairly similar picture quality. The only benefit to 4k tv over 1080p tv for 1080p content is at large sizes you can't make out the pixels. Maybe this is what you mean by looks incredible, but there are no added details. The only benefit I saw was that you can't make out individual pixels.Well played...
My point being that if you buy a good quality 4K, then upscaling factors in. Laugh at that statement if you want, but it's true. I have a 65 inch Samsung 4K and previous content that I've watched on 1080p looks incredible. Sports? Holy Crap! I realize 65 is larger than 55, but depending on the size of the room and viewing distance, they can be compared. Perhaps there isn't a good 4K deal out there that gives you everything this does plus the resolution, but it's right around the corner. Either way, 2k for a 1080p seems like too much...jmo
I got a 70" 4k specifically because every tv at 70"+ has ginormous pixels that you can pick out the pixels and a 4k 70" doesn't.4K TV right now unless you can get huge for around $1200 ~ $1500 doesn't make sense, at least to me