Amazon has
65" Hisense U8H Series 4K ULED Mini-LED Quantum Smart TV (2022 Model) on sale for
$899.99.
Shipping is free.
Best Buy also has
65" Hisense U8H Series 4K ULED Mini-LED Quantum Smart TV (2022 Model) on sale for
$899.99.
Shipping is free, otherwise select free store pickup where stock permits.
Walmart also has
65" Hisense U8H Series 4K ULED Mini-LED Quantum Smart TV (2022 Model) on sale for
$898.
Shipping is free.
PC Richard & Son also has
65" Hisense U8H Series 4K ULED Mini-LED Quantum Smart TV (2022 Model) on sale for
$899.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
spring45 for finding this deal
Note: Availability for free store pick up may vary by location.
Specs/Key Features- Resolution: 3840x2160 (4K UHD)
- Refresh Rate: 120Hz
- Motion Rate: 480
- WiFi 6E (Triple Band) w/ Bluetooth
- Quantum Dot
- 1500-Nit/HDR10+
- Dolby Vision
- VESA Mount: 400x400mm
- Smart TV w/ Alexa/Google Assistant
- Inputs
- 4x HDMI (2x Up to 4K @ 120Hz & 2x 4K @ 60Hz)
- 2x USB (USB 3.0/2.0
- Ethernet
Warranty- Includes a 2-year manufacturer warranty w/ purchase
88 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
Basically if you've never had an OLED or QLED, you'll tolerate the issues because the picture quality is a massive improvement in most cases. If you have experience with QLED/OLED you might find the issues unforgivable.
The U8K dropping this summer should have a different SOC so it will be interesting to see if some issues are mitigated or remain. Hisense is gonna be in a tough spot if QD-OLED moves closer in price…if I can get a QD-OLED for under $1500 I don't know that I'd buy a Hisense ULED/MiniLED for $1000 (even though they keep improving it).
One thing to keep in mind though: do not expect any reasonable software update support. Mine is still stuck on the Feb 2021 android security patch. I reached out to their support to see if there was a later update that wasn't showing up OTA, and they sent me an update file timestamped Mar 2021 so I didn't even bother installing it.
That's about half a year of security update support from when it was released to market.
If you get this, I would recommended against connecting it to the internet and instead using a streaming box/stick that doesn't leave a hole in your network.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The U8H was worlds better than my 55" TCL from ~5 years ago. No comparison there of course aside from the fact that my firetv cube didn't work too well with it. I'd have to manually use the Hisense remote to switch input instead of hitting the Cube remote or asking Alexa to switch input. I'm on the tech side of life so having spent 30 minutes frustrated me that this would never work properly. The remotes in our house disappear too easily. The LG does not have this problem and paired very easily with the same Cube. THE Magicremote of LG feels better.
The weight difference is very noticeable between the models. ~15 pounds or so doesn't seem significant but it does make for a very easy wall install for the LG.
The picture is phenomenal on the C2 compared to the U8H. It just is. Would I notice if not just using both TVs though? Perhaps not. My upgrade was such a wide gap that both were too significant from what we had.
The sound is noticeable better too on the C2 as I haven't even hooked my surround sound back up to the C2 as it rather adequate for the moment.
The LG channels have been a nice surprise and we do find ourselves using them for background noise or a quick go-to while we agree on what we actually want to watch.
Is it worth $420 more to jump on the C2? I think it was, but I'm fortunate to have the ability to do so after someone wanted to buy the U8H. I would be perfectly happy had I kept the U8H. They are both great TVs. If you use your TV more than 15 hours a week then perhaps go with the C2 otherwise the $ difference could impact your life better elsewhere IMO but you can't go wrong either way.
Even if one doesnt own one I think people would have seen one elsewhere and know the differences
The U8H was worlds better than my 55" TCL from ~5 years ago. No comparison there of course aside from the fact that my firetv cube didn't work too well with it. I'd have to manually use the Hisense remote to switch input instead of hitting the Cube remote or asking Alexa to switch input. I'm on the tech side of life so having spent 30 minutes frustrated me that this would never work properly. The remotes in our house disappear too easily. The LG does not have this problem and paired very easily with the same Cube. THE Magicremote of LG feels better.
The weight difference is very noticeable between the models. ~15 pounds or so doesn't seem significant but it does make for a very easy wall install for the LG.
The picture is phenomenal on the C2 compared to the U8H. It just is. Would I notice if not just using both TVs though? Perhaps not. My upgrade was such a wide gap that both were too significant from what we had.
The sound is noticeable better too on the C2 as I haven't even hooked my surround sound back up to the C2 as it rather adequate for the moment.
The LG channels have been a nice surprise and we do find ourselves using them for background noise or a quick go-to while we agree on what we actually want to watch.
Is it worth $420 more to jump on the C2? I think it was, but I'm fortunate to have the ability to do so after someone wanted to buy the U8H. I would be perfectly happy had I kept the U8H. They are both great TVs. If you use your TV more than 15 hours a week then perhaps go with the C2 otherwise the $ difference could impact your life better elsewhere IMO but you can't go wrong either way.
Yes...OLED is a different beast but for similar money I would have bought the Samsung QN90a
Even if one doesnt own one I think people would have seen one elsewhere and know the differences
Yep that was the jump I made. 2016 Samsung basic 4K TV to 2021 Hisense U8G. I was initially blown away, but over time the various shortcomings that haven't been able to be fixed can get annoying.
Red ghosting, black smearing, motion issues, etc. These aren't present in every scenario, but enough that they are annoying. However when it's right, it has fantastic picture quality…it's just a mixed bag.
Yes...OLED is a different beast but for similar money I would have bought the Samsung QN90a
Yes...OLED is a different beast but for similar money I would have bought the Samsung QN90a
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
best Tv and bang for buck from last year. dolby vision content on this is stunning. as someone else mentioned, TV struggles upscaling content that is 720p and below. is that worth a 1k jump in price foe a samsung?
i said no and have had no regrets with the purchase.
I apologize in advance for asking technical questions, I've dug around and tried to change settings but to no success.
Thanks in advance 🙏
https://www.avsforum.co
I apologize in advance for asking technical questions, I've dug around and tried to change settings but to no success.
Thanks in advance 🙏
There might be uhd deep color setting that needs to be turned on for that particular hdmi port. Check the settings.
https://www.alphr.com/turn-on-4k-hisense-tv/
I stand by that opinion
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/c...shold=0.10
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/c...shold=0.10
Red ghosting, black smearing, motion issues, etc. These aren't present in every scenario, but enough that they are annoying. However when it's right, it has fantastic picture quality…it's just a mixed bag.
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/c...shold=0.10
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
In addition to twice as many local dimming zones, it now boasts up to 1500 nits brightness. Combined with its anti-glare and low reflection panel, this gives you the best picture quality, even in sunny rooms.
Other visual upgrades to this series include IMAX enhanced, FilmMaker mode, Dolby Vision IQ, Quantum Dot, Dolby Dark Detail, and HDR10+, anti-glare and low reflection panel, Wifi 6e, NEXTGEN TV ATSC 3.0 OTA tuner.
Yes sir the tuner thing is huge for me