Best Buy via eBay has
43" Pioneer 4K UHD Smart Xumo LED TV (PN43-751-24U) on sale for
$129.99.
Shipping is free.
Best Buy has
43" Pioneer 4K UHD Smart Xumo LED TV (PN43-751-24U) on sale for
$129.99.
Shipping is free, otherwise select free store pickup where available.
- Note: Availability for pickup may vary by location.
Thanks to community member
delz4stelz for finding this deal.
Specs:
- Resolution: 3840x2160 4K
- Refresh Rate: 60Hz
- Backlight Type: Direct Lit LED
- Smart Platform: Xumo
- Dolby Vision and HDR10
- VESA: 400x200mm
- Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 5.2
- Ports:
- 3x HDMI
- 1x RF
- 1x Composite Video
- 1x Optical Digital Audio
- 1x Analog Audio
- 1x Ethernet
- 1x USB
Top Comments
I bought this to replace my old computer monitor and to fully utilize the 4k resolution of my graphics card. I couldn't be happier.
Works very well as a monitor for my chromebook. I am super impressed.
Used as computer monitor. Resolution matches remote servers well.
Picture is great. I use it fory computer monitor and I can watch tv on it too
Great purchae with it being on sale! Nice size for my kiddos dorm room & works as a decent gaming monitor and excellent as a computer monitor!
I've done some scrounging around online, and, even high level competitive players circa ~2017ish were doing great with worse input lag times than modern stuff gets. I had my calculations completely wrong. I thought there were 100 miliseconds in 1 second for some reason when there are 1000 lol. So a few thousandths of a second truly isn't something to worry about. You can try and hunt around online and youtube for more budget set specs/reviews/input lag, it's a bit harder if something hasn't just been reviewed by rtings which is easily looked up. In a youtube input lag test, these Xumo Pioneer got about ~14ms, the cheapo r6 hisense got about ~12ms, Roku Select in the rtings review got ~13.1ms, and the hisense a7 got the lowest at ~10.8ms, although it apparently has an annoying glitch with gaming mode not working requiring multiple restarts which may end up killing my motivation to get it, per rtings "There is a weird bug where the input lag is much higher than expected. Rebooting the TV multiple times fixes it, and the input lag numbers subsequently fall within expectations."
be wary though, unless there's been some nitty gritty review to let people know ahead of time, some tv's use a "BGR" pixel layout instead of a traditional one. There are apparently workarounds though, per the rtings roku select review "The TV uses a BGR (blue-green-red) subpixel layout. For multimedia usage, this doesn't cause any issues, but it causes text clarity issues when you use this TV as a PC monitor. There are easy workarounds for these issues, however, and you can read about them here". Per the hisense a6 hisense review "This TV uses a BGR subpixel layout, which doesn't impact the image quality, but it makes text look blurry in some applications that don't support the BGR layout, which is important if you want to use it as a PC monitor. You can read more about it here."
Hope that helps anyone also eyeing a cheap but still decent tv. Been doing my homework... I consider myself a techie compared to the average joe but am very much a "buy a cheap but decent enough tv once every ~10 years" type of person
36 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank waterchange
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I've done some scrounging around online, and, even high level competitive players circa ~2017ish were doing great with worse input lag times than modern stuff gets. I had my calculations completely wrong. I thought there were 100 miliseconds in 1 second for some reason when there are 1000 lol. So a few thousandths of a second truly isn't something to worry about. You can try and hunt around online and youtube for more budget set specs/reviews/input lag, it's a bit harder if something hasn't just been reviewed by rtings which is easily looked up. In a youtube input lag test, these Xumo Pioneer got about ~14ms, the cheapo r6 hisense got about ~12ms, Roku Select in the rtings review got ~13.1ms, and the hisense a7 got the lowest at ~10.8ms, although it apparently has an annoying glitch with gaming mode not working requiring multiple restarts which may end up killing my motivation to get it, per rtings "There is a weird bug where the input lag is much higher than expected. Rebooting the TV multiple times fixes it, and the input lag numbers subsequently fall within expectations."
be wary though, unless there's been some nitty gritty review to let people know ahead of time, some tv's use a "BGR" pixel layout instead of a traditional one. There are apparently workarounds though, per the rtings roku select review "The TV uses a BGR (blue-green-red) subpixel layout. For multimedia usage, this doesn't cause any issues, but it causes text clarity issues when you use this TV as a PC monitor. There are easy workarounds for these issues, however, and you can read about them here". Per the hisense a6 hisense review "This TV uses a BGR subpixel layout, which doesn't impact the image quality, but it makes text look blurry in some applications that don't support the BGR layout, which is important if you want to use it as a PC monitor. You can read more about it here."
Hope that helps anyone also eyeing a cheap but still decent tv. Been doing my homework... I consider myself a techie compared to the average joe but am very much a "buy a cheap but decent enough tv once every ~10 years" type of person
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