Amazon has 75" Samsung Q70C 4K 120Hz Smart QLED TV (QN75Q70CAFXZA) on sale for $999.99. Shipping is free.
Best Buy has 75" Samsung Q70C 4K 120Hz Smart QLED TV (QN75Q70CAFXZA) on sale for $999.99. Shipping is free.
Costco Wholesale also has for its Members: 75" Samsung Class Q70C Series 4K UHD QLED LCD TV (QN75Q70CDFXZA) on sale for $999.99. Shipping is free. [Discuss]
Note, Allstate 3-Year Protection Plan is included for a total of 5-Year coverage
Thanks community members Champagne13 for sharing this deal
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.
Hisense has a high than normal number of failures.
Same price at Costco as item number 9075700 with 5 year All State protection.
I had one entry level Samsung die after a year and a half. I have 2 that have lasted (still going knock on wood) for years! I think once you get to this level you're fine as the components are generally better quality.
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How is this compared to the LG C3? Thats the TV I've been eyeing from these alerts the past few days until I just saw this. I'm sure this is probably a rhetorical question but I'm not that knowledgeable when it comes to TVs
Edit: never mind, clearly the LG
There is no comparison. LG is OLED, this is a lower middle of the line "q"LED TV. If you're looking for near OLED performance but are hesitant about burn-in, Samsungs "QN" QLED line is their premium line. It's a mini-Led TV, so it can have a very large number of light zones behind the panel.
I bought a QN90C on its latest deal here, 75in for $1450 and couldn't be happier. Its got almost oled blacks and almost no light blooming due to the number of dimming zones.
I got a Q70T about a year ago, and it's literally nothing but problems. I have 2016 KS8000's around the house that are still running strong, but the Q70T literally freezes daily even though I'm not even using its smart features; I know it has frozen when the audio stops working and have to hold down the power button for 10 seconds to force restart it. No amount of resetting fixes it. It also won't connect to my wifi (even with a dedicated 2.4GHz network) literally the worst TV I've ever bought and makes me question ever buying a Samsung TV again. I've complained to Samsung, and the best they say is to reset the TV/buy a new remote, even though the tv literally won't respond to any other remote either. I'd avoid this like the plague.
The TV has decent upscaling and sharpness processing. Fine details in low-resolution content are displayed well, but text is a bit blurry, and the scene looks a bit soft overall.
There are some visible uniformity issues, with noticeable vignetting. There's some banding in parts of the screen and a bit of dirty screen effect.
On darker colors, there's noticeable backlight bleeding, with the corners and sides of the image being blueish compared to the center.
I got a Q70T about a year ago, and it's literally nothing but problems. I have 2016 KS8000's around the house that are still running strong, but the Q70T literally freezes daily even though I'm not even using its smart features; I know it has frozen when the audio stops working and have to hold down the power button for 10 seconds to force restart it. No amount of resetting fixes it. It also won't connect to my wifi (even with a dedicated 2.4GHz network) literally the worst TV I've ever bought and makes me question ever buying a Samsung TV again. I've complained to Samsung, and the best they say is to reset the TV/buy a new remote, even though the tv literally won't respond to any other remote either. I'd avoid this like the plague.
The Samsung 60 70 & 80 series are definitely not what they used to be...
The only model worth buying is the 90
Which one is a better buy ? This or the 65 inches Sony Bravia X90L for $1100 ? Price are close so can someone help me with the comparision for the better experience ?
Going from $700 60 inches LG LCD bought in 2016-2017 and just died
You just made that up. Not a single well known expert review site makes that claim. In fact the YouTube review channel Stop the Fomo reviewed consumer reports data for reliability and found that all brands have similar failures rates among TVs at a similar price point. That means a $1000 Hisense is expected to last the same amount of time as a $1000 Samsung. TVs at a similar price point use similar components, it is as simple as that.
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When you go into actual A/V forums there are many, many complaints about Samsung TV failures. Same with Hisense. People tend to whine when their crap breaks.
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When it comes to picture quality, it isn't even close. The equivalent Hisense wins hands down, just like the first commenter said. https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/c...shold=0.10
he did not make it up. I have one 3 year old Hisense. passed 2 yr old warranty . it crashed all the time. in market for a new TV. IMHO, i will not recommend HIsense to anyone.
he did not make it up. I have one 3 year old Hisense. passed 2 yr old warranty . it crashed all the time. in market for a new TV. IMHO, i will not recommend HIsense to anyone.
And I have had multiple Samsung's die prematurely. That's just anecdotal though. We are talking big data analytics proving they will have similar longevity at a similar price. And Hisense is always better PQ at a similar price, so it wins.
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Can't put a finger on a single best brand these days.
Extended warranty through Credit Cards is a must with TV purchase.
In mine + brothers home, we have:
Hisense 55" LED for 5+ yrs, going strong. Good picture quality IMHO
Sony 75" LED 7+ yrs old - works but hate it
Android TV has been slow as hell for yrs. Have to use Fire stick :/
Samsung: 43" Plasma, 51" Plasma, 65" LED - All running well
LG 65" OLED - best display ever, WebOS is great!
Are these all of the annual pay ones?
Yes both have many complaints, that is what I said...
Edit: never mind, clearly the LG
There is no comparison. LG is OLED, this is a lower middle of the line "q"LED TV. If you're looking for near OLED performance but are hesitant about burn-in, Samsungs "QN" QLED line is their premium line. It's a mini-Led TV, so it can have a very large number of light zones behind the panel.
I bought a QN90C on its latest deal here, 75in for $1450 and couldn't be happier. Its got almost oled blacks and almost no light blooming due to the number of dimming zones.
The TV has decent upscaling and sharpness processing. Fine details in low-resolution content are displayed well, but text is a bit blurry, and the scene looks a bit soft overall.
There are some visible uniformity issues, with noticeable vignetting. There's some banding in parts of the screen and a bit of dirty screen effect.
On darker colors, there's noticeable backlight bleeding, with the corners and sides of the image being blueish compared to the center.
The only model worth buying is the 90
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all these device are 50/50 my samsung only lasted 2 year my hisense going on 3
Going from $700 60 inches LG LCD bought in 2016-2017 and just died
.
When you go into actual A/V forums there are many, many complaints about Samsung TV failures. Same with Hisense. People tend to whine when their crap breaks.
.
When it comes to picture quality, it isn't even close. The equivalent Hisense wins hands down, just like the first commenter said.
https://www.rtings.com/tv/tools/c...shold=0.10
And I have had multiple Samsung's die prematurely. That's just anecdotal though. We are talking big data analytics proving they will have similar longevity at a similar price. And Hisense is always better PQ at a similar price, so it wins.