Sussex Nomad
Well-known member
I have a Samsung tv. It's very slim compared to the 70s. It shows a picture on the screen and I can see it very well. Hope this helps
Spent 3 hours in curry’s making them move TVs around so I could compare like for like, showing same picture next to each other.
Clear winner..... Sony. (A something)
Weirdly, the screen is the speaker but I use separate surround sound so wasn’t fussed about sound quality.
Bought it there and then.
Best, clearest picture I’ve ever had. Been going strong for 10 months, no probs, no burn in.
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Was hoping you'd say no thanks and went t'internet to buy it
Spent 3 hours in curry’s making them move TVs around so I could compare like for like, showing same picture next to each other.
Clear winner..... Sony. (A something)
Weirdly, the screen is the speaker but I use separate surround sound so wasn’t fussed about sound quality.
Bought it there and then.
Best, clearest picture I’ve ever had. Been going strong for 10 months, no probs, no burn in.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
That's quite an accolade and I'd like to take some credit, but then I guess I only had a bit part.I think this might just be my favourite NSC exchange of all time.
The problem with comparing TVs next to each other - particularly when in a brightly lit store - is that it becomes a battle for brightness. To help win this battle, manufacturers set the displays to produce an overly bright image out of the box, which you then have to turn down (by changing picture mode) when you get home.Spent 3 hours in curry’s making them move TVs around so I could compare like for like, showing same picture next to each other.
I was fed up with having a monolithic black slab in the front room, so I replaced my much loved Panasonic plasma with the new Samsung ‘Frame’. In my opinion, it looks so much better than a normal TV.
View attachment 115005
I'd also never buy an extended warranty, but I would buy from somewhere like Richer Sounds or John Lewis where they have 5 year warranties, as TVs do go wrong. Sometimes it's just a new model with issues that haven't been found yet, sometime you're just unlucky. You should still be covered by the sale of goods act, but fighting that is a ball ache.TV's don't "burn" these days.
And NEVER buy an extended warranty. They are absolutely indistructable.
TV's don't "burn" these days.
And NEVER buy an extended warranty. They are absolutely indistructable.
The problem with comparing TVs next to each other - particularly when in a brightly lit store - is that it becomes a battle for brightness. To help win this battle, manufacturers set the displays to produce an overly bright image out of the box, which you then have to turn down (by changing picture mode) when you get home.
When you're watching something good on the box in the evening, you want nice dark blacks (a speciality of OLEDs and decent plasmas) and realistic colours. That's not something that's easy to pick out in a Curry's showroom.