Costco Wholesale: 65" Samsung CU7000 Crystal 4K UHD Smart Tizen TV w/ 3 Year Warranty (2023 Model) 2 for $700 ($350 EA) + Free Shipping
$699.98
$1,378.00
+28Deal Score
83,073 Views
Costco Wholesale[costco.com] has 65" Samsung CU7000 Crystal 4K UHD Smart Tizen TV w/ 3 Year Manufacturer's Warranty (2023 Model, UN65CU7000DXZA) on sale at 2 for $699.98 ($349.99 Each). Shipping is free.
Is this optimal for those playing only games that cap at 60 fps?
Hello I just buy a 50" TCL with a refresh rate of 240 less than 250$ with 5 yr costco warranty for 5 yrs I use for security cams I replaced a Sony bra via 65" the color quality is supurb the Sony lasted 2 yrs 7 months
I bought one a few months ago and it's been having sound issues. It starts to crackle and cuts off completely. Restarting fixes the issue. I will be returning soon
Garbage quality, I wouldn't even let my mother-law watch this.....and I hate her.
I got this Tv same price many weeks ago from Costco.
Is there a setting to change for dark scenes . It's terrible in dark or for dark scenes. Movies look like low budget tv shows and I now wonder if it's the TV .
I got this Tv same price many weeks ago from Costco.
Is there a setting to change for dark scenes . It's terrible in dark or for dark scenes. Movies look like low budget tv shows and I now wonder if it's the TV .
Which one should you prefer among TCL 65S450G vs Samsung CU7000D?
I know both are entry level TVs, so don't compare the cons with high end TVs, we're looking for a cheapest 65 inch, since we might move often, and hence we don't want to invest much.
My personal preference is the TCL panel due to Google TV and also because the panel has better contrast ratio.
Samsung TVs have gone seriously downhill in the past 3-4 years. Looks like Sony has taken the crown from them in terms of AI upscaling and quality. This particular model is pretty much competing with the cheap crappy chinese tvs from TCL and Hisense and even on that front it loses as those TVs have better specs.
Even some commercial panels require wifi to setup for the first time. Maybe that wifi requirement is fine at most people's homes, but in some environments, it's totally plausible there's the TV is airgapped. Such as being used in a garage or cabin without network connectivity of any kind.
A friend's TV that's "smart" gave a massive popup the other day, saying pretty much "AGREE TO THESE NEW TERMS OR ELSE". Turns out they were forcing broad-reaching arbitration and a few more data collection policies. She could not "refuse" said agreement. So if you ever wanted to sue that company, you can't -- even if it wasn't related to the TV. This is the world we live in now, apparently.
I've started buying a few spare older TVs at yard sales & estate sales. For $20-50, I can get a perfectly usable 1080p display that doesn't need anything more than an HDMI cable.
They exist. They're called large format displays.
That fact doesn't matter, though, because you'll just complain about how expensive they are or that they don't have some arbitrary feature.
You can't have it both ways. Either the TV is cheap because it has subsidization or you pay for the subsidies.
However, you're also embellishing greatly (some would even say BSing) on these smart features. There's not a single internet setup process that can't be skipped either through a button or alternative procedure.
Moreover, even the cheapest Roku TV from Walmart allows you to set the default input source. The same can be said for Android TV, WebOS, and Tizen.
If you haven't found it, it's because you haven't been looking.
I bought one a few months ago and it's been having sound issues. It starts to crackle and cuts off completely. Restarting fixes the issue. I will be returning soon
Smart move. The power board will eventually go out soon. I had a qled Samsung and it was doing the same thing. One last crackle and pop, I can no longer turn it on
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Is there a setting to change for dark scenes . It's terrible in dark or for dark scenes. Movies look like low budget tv shows and I now wonder if it's the TV .
HDMI 2.1
HDR10
120HZ (Native)
Freesync Premium
I'd also accept Gsync but it's not a must.
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Is there a setting to change for dark scenes . It's terrible in dark or for dark scenes. Movies look like low budget tv shows and I now wonder if it's the TV .
what do you expect out of a 350 dollar POS 65"
Cali, Colombia I suppose?
I know both are entry level TVs, so don't compare the cons with high end TVs, we're looking for a cheapest 65 inch, since we might move often, and hence we don't want to invest much.
My personal preference is the TCL panel due to Google TV and also because the panel has better contrast ratio.
Even some commercial panels require wifi to setup for the first time. Maybe that wifi requirement is fine at most people's homes, but in some environments, it's totally plausible there's the TV is airgapped. Such as being used in a garage or cabin without network connectivity of any kind.
A friend's TV that's "smart" gave a massive popup the other day, saying pretty much "AGREE TO THESE NEW TERMS OR ELSE". Turns out they were forcing broad-reaching arbitration and a few more data collection policies. She could not "refuse" said agreement. So if you ever wanted to sue that company, you can't -- even if it wasn't related to the TV. This is the world we live in now, apparently.
I've started buying a few spare older TVs at yard sales & estate sales. For $20-50, I can get a perfectly usable 1080p display that doesn't need anything more than an HDMI cable.
They exist. They're called large format displays.
That fact doesn't matter, though, because you'll just complain about how expensive they are or that they don't have some arbitrary feature.
You can't have it both ways. Either the TV is cheap because it has subsidization or you pay for the subsidies.
However, you're also embellishing greatly (some would even say BSing) on these smart features. There's not a single internet setup process that can't be skipped either through a button or alternative procedure.
Moreover, even the cheapest Roku TV from Walmart allows you to set the default input source. The same can be said for Android TV, WebOS, and Tizen.
If you haven't found it, it's because you haven't been looking.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Smart move. The power board will eventually go out soon. I had a qled Samsung and it was doing the same thing. One last crackle and pop, I can no longer turn it on