QB0J93VdC0J:https://www.walmart.com/ip/onn-65-Class-4K-2160p-UHD-LED-Roku-Smart-TV-HDR-100021261/422957278+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us [googleusercontent.com]====================
Box dimensions of 2019 Hisense H6570G (similar TV):
64.1" x 40.6" x 7.3"
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MFG. product Spec sheet for 2019 Hisense H6570G:
https://assets.hisense-usa.com/as...H6570F.pdf
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MFG. product spec sheet for 2020 Hisense 65R6E3:
https://assets.hisense-usa.com/as...102020.pdf
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MFG. product spec sheet for 2020 Hisense 65R6090G:
https://assets.hisense-usa.com/as...102020.pdf
====================
Box dimensions
Anybody know the box dimensions?
onn. 42" Class FHD (1080P) LED Roku Smart TV [walmart.com] will be $88 on Nov 4th too.
The model seems to almost identical to Hisense H6570G: https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/hisense/h6570g
Now that the sale is over, Walmart has taken down the original link.
But they still have another page with what appears to be the same TV here.
Good if you want to examine the specs.
This appears to be a slight older Hisense H6570F model while the BlackFriday model is H6570G. The newer H6570G has better upscaling and Chroma 4:4:4 for computer usage.
onn. 65" Class 4K (2160p) UHD LED Roku Smart TV HDR (100012587) [walmart.com]
No box dimensions found, but product dimensions are listed as:
11.60 x 57.30 x 35.10 Inches
These cheap TVs tend to have fairly minimal packaging.



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I own a 65in LG OLED, and a 55in Samsung Q80R.... Both last year's top TVs for price and performance... And I still use the Hisense 65in I got last year for $240 and I have no issue with the 50in ONN I bought for $100 as well.
Budget 4K are pretty damn good from Septre, ONN and the like... People praise TCL and forget people talked trash about them as well... Same thing for Vizio.
Even more interesting is a lot of budget sets use 2nd tier Samsung VA panels that actually look better than the entry level LGs with poor contrast.
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I actually did but couldn't find clear answers
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Genuine-...Swrr5fjz9n
If you prefer the point anywhere type of RF remotes, they sell them at Walmart [walmart.com], Target [target.com], Amazon [amazon.com], Roku.com [roku.com], and other places for $19.99.
Roku.com [roku.com] has the enhanced one w/ the headphone jack for $29.99. You could just use the free app [roku.com] too. I actually like a regular remote myself.
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The source is pretty much any 4K YouTube video. I have not tried any other source. Everything else I've played since I started playing 4K on YouTube has pretty much just been 1080p videos or lower. And the artifacting does not happen for those videos
I'm interested in trying other sources like a direct 4K video via USB, a local Plex video file, or via a Blu-ray player, but honestly if its doing this just from YouTube I might as well return it. Also I have the TV on the floor atm- not sure if that would have anything to do with it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXb3EKW
if anyone else would like to test. Mine doesn't have that issue (just tested on the Hisense) so it sounds like you got a defective unit.
The more of you guys that get these and unbox them and the more problems I see reported, the more I'm definitely thinking these were panels that didn't pass QC. Failure rate is a little too high for a brand new unit. In the Hisense thread people were getting smashed panels from shipping but none of this other stuff artifacting, multiple dead pixels, vertical lines.
Definitely buy a warranty if you expect to keep this TV.
I was watching PBS Kids and on two commercial breaks, the video went completely scrambled. The video stays scrambled until I change channels.
I happen to have a USB flash drive plugged in for the pause feature, if that makes a difference, but have not paused anything.
Other than that, playback of everything else is great so far.
Or does it just say 70" on box but actually 65"?
Actually warranties are typically not a sign of a manufacturers confidence in the product, it's an marketing strategy as an incentive to buy their product over that of a competitor. The idea is that a longer warranty will convince a buyer to buy a product that they otherwise might not (if all things equal choose the one with the longer warranty right?) In reality most defects with a product are discovered within the store return period and rarely 1-2 years after owning the product. Warranty claims also typically have some hassle or hoops to jump through as a deterrent of actually making a claim and for a "disposable" electronic such as a $230 tv, most people would rather replace it with a better $230 tv in a few years rather than deal with fixing an old one or getting a refurb as a replacement. Every consumer advocate such as consumer reports will tell you that warranties on electronics (especially extended warranties) are not worth anything.
Or does it just say 70" on box but actually 65"?
https://slickdeals.net/f/14456783-70-onn-class-4k-uhd-hdr-roku-smart-led-tv-298-43-onn-class-4k-uhd-led-tv-88-free-s-h?v=1&src=SiteS
..which was $298 (and sold out quickly) about 3 weeks ago. If it looks like the box has been opened, I might be a bit wary that the TV had issues and was returned.
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https://slickdeals.net/f/14456783-70-onn-class-4k-uhd-hdr-roku-smart-led-tv-298-43-onn-class-4k-uhd-led-tv-88-free-s-h?v=1&src=SiteS
..which was $298 (and sold out quickly) about 3 weeks ago. If it looks like the box has been opened, I might be a bit wary that the TV had issues and was returned.
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