We like asking thought-provoking questions to help generate discussion.What is this the purpose of this question? Marketing?
I am currently waiting for the old one to die. I have a Sony SXRD KDS-R60XBR1 which I purchased around 2006. I occasionally put in a new lamp and had to replace a fan once. It still looks pretty good, nothing like the new tech but adequate resolution and good color for our viewing distance, out of the box great sound from its speakers which flank both sides of the screen putting voices and sound at viewing height with response down to 40Hz (which is great for a TV!) and it has inputs for legacy gear like my old S-VHS and FireWire HDV devices. It’s all tied in with my surround receiver so even though I have some picture envy I’m still good with my rear projection. It’s my video equivalent of “vinyl”.How often do all of you upgrade your main (or secondary) TV sets over the years? Do you upgrade every few years on schedule to take advantage of new display tech? Are you comfortable with what you have until something MAJOR comes along (HDR vs. SDR, 1080p vs. 4K etc)? Or do you just look for deals when you can?
As a reviewer I keep to a moderate schedule of ever 4-5 years as display technology changes enough where I have to in order to take advantage of new formats and new tech within the formats, although for my secondary (Living room, bedroom, office) I keep a much more lax approach on the subject and do so when I get a good enough deal to make it palatable to change out a $1,000 display
So what are your upgrade habits? Do you have a specific time frame? or does it simply happen when your old one dies?
When we bought Sony flagship 77" version last year we thought that would be it no. (we are 66 and 77) BUT have noticed tech has taken a leap forward so maybe in ablout 2 years we'll be shopping. This is the best telly we have ever owned. We startred with Sumsung, never again, after 3 models, then Pansonic which we thought we'd stick with but their flagship model in 22 was disappointing and that is when we switched to Sony. We saw it on when we went to our supplier for another eason and was o taken we immediately decided we would change our brand.How often do all of you upgrade your main (or secondary) TV sets over the years? Do you upgrade every few years on schedule to take advantage of new display tech? Are you comfortable with what you have until something MAJOR comes along (HDR vs. SDR, 1080p vs. 4K etc)? Or do you just look for deals when you can?
As a reviewer I keep to a moderate schedule of ever 4-5 years as display technology changes enough where I have to in order to take advantage of new formats and new tech within the formats, although for my secondary (Living room, bedroom, office) I keep a much more lax approach on the subject and do so when I get a good enough deal to make it palatable to change out a $1,000 display
So what are your upgrade habits? Do you have a specific time frame? or does it simply happen when your old one dies?
The Samsung in the living room has started to show lavender vignetting all the way around.
When we bought Sony flagship 77" version last year we thought that would be it no. (we are 66 and 77) BUT have noticed tech has taken a leap forward so maybe in ablout 2 years we'll be shopping. This is the best telly we have ever owned. We startred with Sumsung, never again, after 3 models, then Pansonic which we thought we'd stick with but their flagship model in 22 was disappointing and that is when we switched to Sony. We saw it on when we went to our supplier for another eason and was o taken we immediately decided we would change our brand.
However, for us to upgrade the difference is really goin got have to be spectacular as this Sony is good. As an aside, we have stopped using the Fire Tv cube in favour of the latests Apple Tv box. Picture is far superior.
The sound comes from my AVR 31 Arcam, 6 Monitor gold floor standers, 2 Yamaha subs and the tv is the centre speaker.
It is used about 60 minutes/week, so I can deal with it for now.This would have me on the horn, talking to ValueElectronics in about 5 seconds. I couldn't do it.
Easy!
I don't have a TV.
No cable subscription, some streaming here and there, and an extensive collection of movies and tv shows amassed through the years.
When I want to watch something, I fire up the projector and lower the screen.
The rest of the time, I have a good sound system and I listen to music. No TV running all day in my house. No TV at all.
I used to think that some people not having a TV in their house were weird.
Now I get it... or maybe I'm weird too.
As said in my comment above... there isn't enough meaningful content to use on the 8k screen, and then it might be just upscaled stuff anyway. I believe we are at the end of the technology envelope for TV technology. The future is probably not in more 'K'... the future is going to be in more native content for VR or something.I don’t think I’ll be going 8k very soon.
Wow, aren't you afraid it will burn in? I've never used mine as a monitor, partly for that reason.LG C1 OLED here which I got for a great price just before the C2 was released ie. about 3 years ago. I'm 100% happy with this TV.
Had to tweak it a bit to get my preferred picture though, out of the box IIRC it's in "Vivid" mode which is really unnatural. The only other tweak was to get the service remote so I could disable auto dimming as I also use it for PC monitor and that feature is annoying.
Can't imagine replacing it until it dies, unless I get a bigger room.
I just replaced my LG Nano cell 86 inch after 5 years. Too much has changed in 5 years not to upgrade. I bought an off brand that's becoming bigger in the country. I purchased the New QLED 100-inch U8K from Hisense after watching and reading many reviews of what it can do and for a very good price that you can afford compared to the name brand, LG, and Samsung, they're prices are out of site if you looked lately, and I have for the last year before buying the Hisense. I have to say so far for owning it for 3 weeks I didn't make a mistake buying it. The QLED is living up to its name, even my wife says she has seen a difference in detail that this QLED is doing its job. The black levels are very good, better than the LG, which I wound up giving the LG to our daughter and husband and they love it, but they haven't sat down and watched this one yet, but they will get to here this coming week. People might think, you bought an off brand 100-inch Tv??? yeah, I did and hope it does last 5 years. Oh, another thing that made me feel better of buying that brand, they give you a two-year warranty, who else is doing that. I would have loved to have gotten the 98-inch Samsung, but even on sale at $6000. dollars I wasn't about to jump on it. I myself just couldn't part with that much cash for it, and LG isn't much different, 5 to 6 grand for theirs, I just couldn't do it. But every 5 years is about time for a new upgrade by the way they're improving everything you can think of with the new tech coming around. I just wonder how much better it will be in another 5 years. Oh, these new QLED TVs are improving the most, even more then OLED's that are out with the newest tech.How often do all of you upgrade your main (or secondary) TV sets over the years? Do you upgrade every few years on schedule to take advantage of new display tech? Are you comfortable with what you have until something MAJOR comes along (HDR vs. SDR, 1080p vs. 4K etc)? Or do you just look for deals when you can?
As a reviewer I keep to a moderate schedule of ever 4-5 years as display technology changes enough where I have to in order to take advantage of new formats and new tech within the formats, although for my secondary (Living room, bedroom, office) I keep a much more lax approach on the subject and do so when I get a good enough deal to make it palatable to change out a $1,000 display
So what are your upgrade habits? Do you have a specific time frame? or does it simply happen when your old one dies?