Klimtology
Footballguy
I'm in the market. Looking for the highest quality 50 inch.
TIA
TIA
My LG TV has lasted 17 years and is still going strong.my recent experience with LG and Costco. hope it helps with decision-making
https://forums.footballguys.com/thr...-again-a-rant-update-resolution-added.814326/
We have the LG C2 OLED 65" as our family room TV, their 48" in a den, and I use their smaller 42" as a computer monitor. Crushes Samsung by a mile IMO.
LG OLED for the win. There was a ridiculous deal on their refurbished G4 version the other day, granted this is was a 65 versus the 50 you are seeking.
??? How so? The G4 and the S95D are about as closely performing as you can get in OLED’s.We have the LG C2 OLED 65" as our family room TV, their 48" in a den, and I use their smaller 42" as a computer monitor. Crushes Samsung by a mile IMO.
My bad, as I was comparing my OLED'S to the Non-Oled Samsung's that my family members have purchased for the Super Bowl as well as afterwards. So it was really not a comparable apples to oranges LG v Samsung by me.??? How so? The G4 and the S95D are about as closely performing as you can get in OLED’s.We have the LG C2 OLED 65" as our family room TV, their 48" in a den, and I use their smaller 42" as a computer monitor. Crushes Samsung by a mile IMO.
I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
I would agree- assuming you have the space. I also will add the LG OLEDs look incredible. I am very pleased with my '65 CX that I got in 2020. I would love to get another for the house, maybe even larger.Go bigger than 50 imo
Do it. Fantastic TV. The color accuracy is unreal77" Samsung S90D OLED open box at a nearby Best Buy for $1499.
I am VERY tempted....
Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
This was discussed in another thread (who knows which one) but I agree. External devices are the way to go - IMO they always look better than the TV's native apps.Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Logitech discontinued Harmony remotes a few years ago. You may still be able to get old stock, but they aren't keeping them up to date. It's a real bummer because they were really solid remotes and I'm not sure there's a good consumer-grade replacement. I still run one in the basement where I have a full theater system with multiple displays and rack mounted equipment. The Harmony Elite I have down there works great for a very complicated set-up.
I have found that since we ditched DirecTV and have gone with just streaming, for anything that doesn't have a complicated A/V set-up, a Fire TV with the included remote works just fine. One input, one audio source. You can program them now to control the volume via a sound bar or external tuner. As long as you're not switching inputs a lot and don't need numerical buttons, I think they work fine.
Also - I don't even try and use the smart TV functionality on any of my TV's..it might work for some, but I've found a $25 Fire Stick works better and faster in every case. I wish the TV makers would just go back to making displays. Even though I don't use it, my TV's often restart due to OS / app updates. Super annoying.
On my Sony, I use an old Roku player. I've never even tried to use the smart function on that one.This was discussed in another thread (who knows which one) but I agree. External devices are the way to go - IMO they always look better than the TV's native apps.Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Logitech discontinued Harmony remotes a few years ago. You may still be able to get old stock, but they aren't keeping them up to date. It's a real bummer because they were really solid remotes and I'm not sure there's a good consumer-grade replacement. I still run one in the basement where I have a full theater system with multiple displays and rack mounted equipment. The Harmony Elite I have down there works great for a very complicated set-up.
I have found that since we ditched DirecTV and have gone with just streaming, for anything that doesn't have a complicated A/V set-up, a Fire TV with the included remote works just fine. One input, one audio source. You can program them now to control the volume via a sound bar or external tuner. As long as you're not switching inputs a lot and don't need numerical buttons, I think they work fine.
Also - I don't even try and use the smart TV functionality on any of my TV's..it might work for some, but I've found a $25 Fire Stick works better and faster in every case. I wish the TV makers would just go back to making displays. Even though I don't use it, my TV's often restart due to OS / app updates. Super annoying.
And TV manufacturers just can't seem to make a simple interface baked into their sets. Nevermind the bloatware they include.
Yeah, that's the caveat. If Roku is built in you should be good to go.On my Sony, I use an old Roku player. I've never even tried to use the smart function on that one.This was discussed in another thread (who knows which one) but I agree. External devices are the way to go - IMO they always look better than the TV's native apps.Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Logitech discontinued Harmony remotes a few years ago. You may still be able to get old stock, but they aren't keeping them up to date. It's a real bummer because they were really solid remotes and I'm not sure there's a good consumer-grade replacement. I still run one in the basement where I have a full theater system with multiple displays and rack mounted equipment. The Harmony Elite I have down there works great for a very complicated set-up.
I have found that since we ditched DirecTV and have gone with just streaming, for anything that doesn't have a complicated A/V set-up, a Fire TV with the included remote works just fine. One input, one audio source. You can program them now to control the volume via a sound bar or external tuner. As long as you're not switching inputs a lot and don't need numerical buttons, I think they work fine.
Also - I don't even try and use the smart TV functionality on any of my TV's..it might work for some, but I've found a $25 Fire Stick works better and faster in every case. I wish the TV makers would just go back to making displays. Even though I don't use it, my TV's often restart due to OS / app updates. Super annoying.
And TV manufacturers just can't seem to make a simple interface baked into their sets. Nevermind the bloatware they include.
My secondary TVs are both TCLs with Roku built in. One I have must be at least a dozen years old and is still kicking. I guess because they mirror my Roku player, the user interface is easy for me.
That's a shame Logitech discontinued those Harmony remotes. They are a godsend for a techno-idiot like me.
Rtings seems to disagree with you. These days, the OLEDs are so close in terms of ratings that you can't really go wrong with any of them.We have the LG C2 OLED 65" as our family room TV, their 48" in a den, and I use their smaller 42" as a computer monitor. Crushes Samsung by a mile IMO.
LG OLED for the win. There was a ridiculous deal on their refurbished G4 version the other day, granted this is was a 65 versus the 50 you are seeking.
Hisense and TCL make great looking sets for cheap, but I personally have extreme reservations about who profits from the sale of those TVs
I'm with you on this, I can get a 98" TCL or Hisense for less than a 83" OLED.Hisense and TCL make great looking sets for cheap, but I personally have extreme reservations about who profits from the sale of those TVs
Meh, I'm done being Chinaphobic. These brands work for me because the savings let me splurge on sound. LG, Sony, Samsung all shipping from Chinese factories. I have a 75" Hisense U7 (mid-line for them), and really couldn't notice the difference in Best Buy with it playing alongside two big brand Oleds. Tons of built in tech, all the audio support, 144hz gaming mode, 1500 nits of brightness, local dimming, $800. Great tv and sounds incredible.![]()
No judgement here. My not buying a TV isn't laying the seeds for communism's downfall, I know.I'm with you on this, I can get a 98" TCL or Hisense for less than a 83" OLED.Hisense and TCL make great looking sets for cheap, but I personally have extreme reservations about who profits from the sale of those TVs
Meh, I'm done being Chinaphobic. These brands work for me because the savings let me splurge on sound. LG, Sony, Samsung all shipping from Chinese factories. I have a 75" Hisense U7 (mid-line for them), and really couldn't notice the difference in Best Buy with it playing alongside two big brand Oleds. Tons of built in tech, all the audio support, 144hz gaming mode, 1500 nits of brightness, local dimming, $800. Great tv and sounds incredible.![]()
I clarified above that I originally was wasn't making an apples to apples comparison, it OLED LG versus non-OLED Samsung that a few people in my family recently purchased.Rtings seems to disagree with you. These days, the OLEDs are so close in terms of ratings that you can't really go wrong with any of them.We have the LG C2 OLED 65" as our family room TV, their 48" in a den, and I use their smaller 42" as a computer monitor. Crushes Samsung by a mile IMO.
LG OLED for the win. There was a ridiculous deal on their refurbished G4 version the other day, granted this is was a 65 versus the 50 you are seeking.
This was discussed in another thread (who knows which one) but I agree. External devices are the way to go - IMO they always look better than the TV's native apps.Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Logitech discontinued Harmony remotes a few years ago. You may still be able to get old stock, but they aren't keeping them up to date. It's a real bummer because they were really solid remotes and I'm not sure there's a good consumer-grade replacement. I still run one in the basement where I have a full theater system with multiple displays and rack mounted equipment. The Harmony Elite I have down there works great for a very complicated set-up.
I have found that since we ditched DirecTV and have gone with just streaming, for anything that doesn't have a complicated A/V set-up, a Fire TV with the included remote works just fine. One input, one audio source. You can program them now to control the volume via a sound bar or external tuner. As long as you're not switching inputs a lot and don't need numerical buttons, I think they work fine.
Also - I don't even try and use the smart TV functionality on any of my TV's..it might work for some, but I've found a $25 Fire Stick works better and faster in every case. I wish the TV makers would just go back to making displays. Even though I don't use it, my TV's often restart due to OS / app updates. Super annoying.
And TV manufacturers just can't seem to make a simple interface baked into their sets. Nevermind the bloatware they include.
Kudos to those in this thread as it gave me the motivation to seek out the life changing FireStick remote pairing that has eluded me these past few years.Have you looked into one of those Harmony all-in-one remotes? I have 4 different brand devices on my main set up and it runs them all.I also despise the LG Magic remote. When we accidentally push a wrong button on it, it takes a while to figure out the navigation back to the main screen so that we can use our "main" Amazon Firestick remote. They also seem to bloat these smart TV's as much as they can with terrible apps and functions.I like the operating system more on Samsung compared to LG.
Well, there aren't many new features that are better. But picture quality of OLED (and now mini-LED) is (mostly) better than the LCD TVs from 5-7 years ago.How much better are the new TVs out now vs ones from 5-7 years ago. The three TVs in our house are all about that age, were described as good “value” models (two TLCs and one Samsung) but are all 4k, HDR, between 50-65” and all seem to be working just fine for our needs.
Reading the newer “specs” of newer models make my head spin, but I’m wondering if any of these new “features” are revolutionary, or if I’d even notice.
Think B4 is more than capable of blowing you away.Since they both feature the same processor and I'll be putting it in my basement that has almost no ambient light...
Is there any reason I wouldn't buy an 83" LG B4 instead of a 77" LG C4?
From my reading, the only difference is a slight brightness improvement in the C4.