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Rating: | (4 out of 5 stars) |
Reviews: | 554 Walmart Reviews |
Product Name: | Sceptre 43" Class 4K Ultra HD (2160P) HDR LED TV (U435CV-U) |
Product Description: | Important Made in USA Origin Disclaimer- For certain items sold by Walmart on Walmart.com, the displayed country of origin information may not be accurate or consistent with manufacturer information. For updated, accurate country of origin data, it is recommended that you rely on product packaging or manufacturer information. With a Sceptre 43-inch LED 4K UHD TV (U435CV-U), entertainment is transformed into an epic adventure. The unequalled color and clear brilliance of 4K (3840 x 2160 or over eight million pixels) will provide more natural and lifelike images than have ever been viewed on a 43-inch screen. Four HDMI ports allow you to connect up to four devices at once, so you can stream, browse and listen to all of your favorite multimedia. The HDMI port is equipped with HDMI 2.0, which lets you seamlessly stream 4K video to get the most rewarding viewing experience that is available on the market.Note- You must have a source of HD programming in order to take full advantage of the Sceptre 43" LED HDTV. Contact your local cable or satellite TV provider for details on how to upgrade. Sceptre U435CV-U 43" 4K Ultra HD 2160p 60Hz LED HDTV (4K x 2K)- |
Manufacturer: | Sceptre Inc |
Model Number: | U435CV-UMK |
Product SKU: | 46867816 |
UPC: | 792343343509 |
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33 Comments
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But unlike say ONN (walmart) this has no smart features, ONN has roku, which is either a pro or a con. Upside because built-in smart features on budget TVs usually lag and suck, but the downside is just buying a 4k roku device is minimum $30, and the actual best smart boxes are over $100, so $150 might quickly be $180+ for most people, unless you have a smart box you arent using.
How about kitchen?
I think he was trying to get at don't use this tv for your living room
It's good for rare viewing... or a background tv def not a tv worthy of being a daily or even casual use
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Just have to wait until the models are clearanced. Last summer the 40" Samsung 6 series was this same price, killer deal.. set a deal alert for what you want and try to be patient
About 9 years ago I paid $1000 for my LG 3D plasma and $300 for the 5 year warranty. I drove it home in my $1000 truck. It was hit by a surge that took out my cable box a couple years ago and one of the HDMI ports, but it's still going strong.
I'm thinking of upgrading just so I can use it for a monitor, because I still get some image retention. I don't like the picture quality of these cheaper TVs. Even the 4k Vizio my mom's boyfriend bought doesn't look as good as my older LG plasma. Low light picture is poor and the Chromecast is slow and will cut out during videos. I recommend Samsung, LG and Sony if you're picky about picture quality.
I'd stay away from Scepter, Insignia, Westinghouse, RCA and Toshiba. They use lesser components and I would rather pay the extra for good quality. If it's for your kids or a gift, sure, I don't think it's a bad place to start, but I couldn't go long term with this.
That's my opinion. I worked for Vann's Appliance and set up their floor model electronics just working in the warehouse. I've probably set up a couple hundred TVs. I got to see one of the first OLED TVs from Sony and the ultrathin Samsung TVs when they first came out. I've seen some great looking TVs in my day, so I can't go back to something like this. I've also rocked the 13" TV with speakers bigger than the TV, back in college. I have pictures. It's pretty funny. This would be a step up from that. I mean, I paid $150 for a 15" CRT computer monitor back in the day. This is better than that.
I'm thinking of upgrading just so I can use it for a monitor, because I still get some image retention. I don't like the picture quality of these cheaper TVs. Even the 4k Vizio my mom's boyfriend bought doesn't look as good as my older LG plasma. Low light picture is poor and the Chromecast is slow and will cut out during videos. I recommend Samsung, LG and Sony if you're picky about picture quality.
I'd stay away from Scepter, Insignia, Westinghouse, RCA and Toshiba. They use lesser components and I would rather pay the extra for good quality. If it's for your kids or a gift, sure, I don't think it's a bad place to start, but I couldn't go long term with this.
That's my opinion. I worked for Vann's Appliance and set up their floor model electronics just working in the warehouse. I've probably set up a couple hundred TVs. I got to see one of the first OLED TVs from Sony and the ultrathin Samsung TVs when they first came out. I've seen some great looking TVs in my day, so I can't go back to something like this. I've also rocked the 13" TV with speakers bigger than the TV, back in college. I have pictures. It's pretty funny. This would be a step up from that. I mean, I paid $150 for a 15" CRT computer monitor back in the day. This is better than that.
High end Plasma picture quality is hard to beat, but their big thing is weird requirements on how to handle and transport, high heat generation, and it is lower power usuage only when compared to a CRT. If I were you, I would be looking for a high refresh rate UHD HDR TV. With the proper media source, it will blow the pants off a plasma when you see the video in 120 or 240hz. You realize how much your brain fills in the frame ratw gaps. It looks weird, but only because your brain isn't used to it.
- Speakers aren't great. They usually aren't for most of these TVs, and at this price, I would lower expectations a bit further.
- Yellow colors seem to be a challenge with this TV, with several comments that you can try and adjust in the Service Menu, but the settings do not save.
- The manual states this has a native 1200:1 contrast ratio, which is pretty bad.
- There is some question whether this TV will upconvert to 4k, seems that default is show at incoming resolution unless you edit in Service Menu, but setting won't stick.
Basically, all the feedback seems consistent with a TV trying to hit an ultra low price point. There is nothing wrong with that, but expectations should be kept low.
I wouldn't consider this so much a bargain as more of a good consideration if you want a cheap TV in garage, shed, or possibly a guest bedroom that is not often used .