Walmart has 50" onn. QLED 4K UHD HDR Roku Smart TV (100071700) on sale for $228. Shipping is free, otherwise select free store pickup if stock is available.
Thanks to Community Member tlogank for finding this deal.
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
Walmart has 50" onn. QLED 4K UHD HDR Roku Smart TV (100071700) on sale for $228. Shipping is free, otherwise select free store pickup if stock is available.
Thanks to Community Member tlogank for finding this deal.
Model: onn. 50” QLED 4K UHD (2160p) Roku Smart TV with Dolby Atmos, Dolby Vision, Local Dimming, 120hz Effective Refresh Rate, and HDR (100071700)
Deal HistoryÂ
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
I still have an account. They gave it a 59, everything around that rating is $600 and up. So it's a good deal for a upper-mid level TV. IDK their range, but their top TV score is 85 and it's a few grand. I'd say the deal seems pretty slick.
"Highs
Excellent color accuracy
Excellent 4K UHD picture quality
Lows
Very limited HDR performance
Narrow viewing angle
Roku Mobile App needed to access some useful picture settings"
HDMI Licensing Administrator no longer certify HDMI 2.0 for new devices, so new electronic will all say HDMI 2.1. But because all the new features on 2.1 are optional, you basically have no way to tell if the new TV/monitor supports any 2.1 features unless it's listed in the tech spec.
Still a really good deal, and thumbs up, but on the TV itself, what is the point of the 2.1 ports if the TV can't handle 120Hz? Atmos pass through perhaps?
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ryocho
Quote
from Dr_Derogatory
:
Still a really good deal, and thumbs up, but on the TV itself, what is the point of the 2.1 ports if the TV can't handle 120Hz? Atmos pass through perhaps?
HDMI Licensing Administrator no longer certify HDMI 2.0 for new devices, so new electronic will all say HDMI 2.1. But because all the new features on 2.1 are optional, you basically have no way to tell if the new TV/monitor supports any 2.1 features unless it's listed in the tech spec.
Not sure how they make tvs this cheap... But for the guest bedroom... Why not. Thanks OP
"... manufacturers can use that light pulsing trick to claim a higher number than the TV actually supports. If you play 120Hz content on a 60Hz display, but bump the effective rate up by flickering the backlight, it won't magically display all 120 frames of content each second. Instead it will display 60, dropping half of the frames to match the actual refresh rate that the display can handle." https://www.tomsguide.com/opinion...iggest-lie
But I guess it's fine for guest-bedroom TV. 60 Hz is still ok.
"... manufacturers can use that light pulsing trick to claim a higher number than the TV actually supports. If you play 120Hz content on a 60Hz display, but bump the effective rate up by flickering the backlight, it won't magically display all 120 frames of content each second. Instead it will display 60, dropping half of the frames to match the actual refresh rate that the display can handle." https://www.tomsguide.com/opinion...iggest-lie
But I guess it's fine for guest-bedroom TV. 60 Hz is still ok.
TCL 5 series is the same, but 240hz effective rate, looks really smooth regardless. Unless you are watching content higher than 60fps it won't look worse.
HDMI Licensing Administrator no longer certify HDMI 2.0 for new devices, so new electronic will all say HDMI 2.1. But because all the new features on 2.1 are optional, you basically have on way to tell if the new TV/monitor supports any 2.1 features unless it's listed in the tech spec.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
"Highs
Excellent color accuracy
Excellent 4K UHD picture quality
Lows
Very limited HDR performance
Narrow viewing angle
Roku Mobile App needed to access some useful picture settings"
120hz effective refresh rate, 60hz panel refresh rate for smooth motion, even in the most action-packed scenes
.not true 120hz
278 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
120hz effective refresh rate, 60hz panel refresh rate for smooth motion, even in the most action-packed scenes
.not true 120hz
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ryocho
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.tomsguide.c
But I guess it's fine for guest-bedroom TV. 60 Hz is still ok.
https://www.tomsguide.c
But I guess it's fine for guest-bedroom TV. 60 Hz is still ok.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment