Various Retailers have
65" TCL QM8 Serries 4K UHD HDR QD-Mini LED Google Smart TV (2024 Model, 65QM851G) on sale from
$898.
Shipping is free or select free store pickup where available.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
ItsSoCheap for finding this deal.
- Note: Availability for pickup may vary by location.
Available retailers:
Product Specs:
- Resolution: 3840 x 2160 (4K Ultra HD)
- Refresh Rate: 120Hz native (144Hz Variable Refresh Rate)
- Motion Enhancement Technology: Motion Rate 480
- Full Array Local Dimming
- Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
- Google TV Smart OS with Hands-Free Voice Control (Google Assistant) and Backlit Voice Remote
- Works with Google Assistant, Amazon Alexa, Apple HomeKit devices
- FreeSync Premium Pro (AMD Adaptive Sync)
- Google Chromecast / Apple AirPlay 2 wireless screen-mirroring support
- Dolby Atmos Audio, 7 Built-in Speakers
- 802.11ax WiFi 6 / Bluetooth 5.2
- VESA: 400 mm x 400 mm
- 1-Year Warranty
- Ports:
- 2x HDMI 2.1
- 2 x HDMI 2.0,
- 1x Composite video
- 1x Ethernet LAN
- 1x 3.5mm audio
- 2x USB-A 2.0
- 1x USB-A 3.0
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Top Comments
37 Comments
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Yeah, some effort to come down from $4k for the 98 on BF/CM week. They feel like they already took 2k off. Guess they haven't gotten the memo that their better specs are washed out by a crappy screen coating and bad VRR.
That's a good deal on this 75" for $1299, at present anyways.
The sleeper here has been the 85U8N @ under $1700 just came back in on Amazon.
The deals on the 65" Oleds were too good the past week to consider anything else really at that size. I guess if you missed all of those
Yeah, some effort to come down from $4k for the 98 on BF/CM week. They feel like they already took 2k off. Guess they haven't gotten the memo that their better specs are washed out by a crappy screen coating and bad VRR.
That's a good deal on this 75" for $1299, at present anyways.
The sleeper here has been the 85U8N @ under $1700 just came back in on Amazon.
The deals on the 65" Oleds were too good the past week to consider anything else really at that size. I guess if you missed all of those
There are people that wont give either brand a real look
So it seems that their pricing structure has often mimicked one another
Similar to Samsung and Sony
For an all around TV..I think the deal in an 85" was the Sony X93L that people were getting at best Buy for $1600...The 75" was $1200 I think...OfCourse that deal was YMMV...but worth the chase for sure as that TV has little flaw
There are people that wont give either brand a real look
So it seems that their pricing structure has often mimicked one another
Similar to Samsung and Sony
For an all around TV..I think the deal in an 85" was the Sony X93L that people were getting at best Buy for $1600...The 75" was $1200 I think...OfCourse that deal was YMMV...but worth the chase for sure as that TV has little flaw
I got one of those BB 77" C3's for $1500 to go pickup. What do you think about that vs. the Hisense 85u8n for $150 more? @10ft seated viewing, but open island kitchen behind that we multi/watch from or drink from during a big game lol.
I got one of those BB 77" C3's for $1500 to go pickup. What do you think about that vs. the Hisense 85u8n for $150 more? @10ft seated viewing, but open island kitchen behind that we multi/watch from or drink from during a big game lol.
Unless you can get a LG G4 for somewhere near that same price....which I know is probably not going to happen
I guess it depends on what you are going to do more of....watch movies I say go for the OLED
if its casual viewing and sports I say the LED
You can buy a pretty good mini led these days( from Hisense /TCL) for less than a base OLED
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As for QM7 vs. QM8. Are you really watching in a room that's got full sunlight, and you're watching all the time in mid-day? And you know that the average TV needs that 1000+ nits brightness like, once per 2 hours for about 3-5 seconds, for that one explosion in Mad Max : Fury Road . Is it really worth the extra $200 for that? I mean, seriously? Also, when ALL of the high-power Mini-Leds (from Hisense AND TCL) are wearing out EARLY on the rtings.com long-term tests, are you sure you want a Mini-Led that lasts just as short as an OLED ?? I did a calculation and you're paying $56 per hour of super-bright 1000-nits operation if what I'm saying about the frequency in movies is correct - over the lifetime of the TV.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7...LTM
Hisense and TCL are trying to destroy the OLED market. LG (and now Samsung - with QD-OLED) are the only companies that can make OLED panels. The chinese cannot make them. So the chinese are trying to destroy ALL of the korean TV makers. They will stop at nothing - including state subsidies, giving TVs away at below-the-cost-to-manufacture-them, to force LG & Samsung out of business. They are offering super-bright TVs with thousands of dimming zones because those are the things that OLED cannot do .. yet. They hope to drive Samsung and LG out of business before these irresponsibly over-bright almost-on-fire Chinese TVs start to fail, which apparently, they are doing rather quickly, according to rtings.com .
As for QM7 vs. QM8. Are you really watching in a room that's got full sunlight, and you're watching all the time in mid-day? And you know that the average TV needs that 1000+ nits brightness like, once per 2 hours for about 3-5 seconds, for that one explosion in Mad Max : Fury Road . Is it really worth the extra $200 for that? I mean, seriously? Also, when ALL of the high-power Mini-Leds (from Hisense AND TCL) are wearing out EARLY on the rtings.com long-term tests, are you sure you want a Mini-Led that lasts just as short as an OLED ?? I did a calculation and you're paying $56 per hour of super-bright 1000-nits operation if what I'm saying about the frequency in movies is correct - over the lifetime of the TV.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7...LTM
Hisense and TCL are trying to destroy the OLED market. LG (and now Samsung - with QD-OLED) are the only companies that can make OLED panels. The chinese cannot make them. So the chinese are trying to destroy ALL of the korean TV makers. They will stop at nothing - including state subsidies, giving TVs away at below-the-cost-to-manufacture-them, to force LG & Samsung out of business. They are offering super-bright TVs with thousands of dimming zones because those are the things that OLED cannot do .. yet. They hope to drive Samsung and LG out of business before these irresponsibly over-bright almost-on-fire Chinese TVs start to fail, which apparently, they are doing rather quickly, according to rtings.com .
As for QM7 vs. QM8. Are you really watching in a room that's got full sunlight, and you're watching all the time in mid-day? And you know that the average TV needs that 1000+ nits brightness like, once per 2 hours for about 3-5 seconds, for that one explosion in Mad Max : Fury Road . Is it really worth the extra $200 for that? I mean, seriously? Also, when ALL of the high-power Mini-Leds (from Hisense AND TCL) are wearing out EARLY on the rtings.com long-term tests, are you sure you want a Mini-Led that lasts just as short as an OLED ?? I did a calculation and you're paying $56 per hour of super-bright 1000-nits operation if what I'm saying about the frequency in movies is correct - over the lifetime of the TV.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7...LTM
Hisense and TCL are trying to destroy the OLED market. LG (and now Samsung - with QD-OLED) are the only companies that can make OLED panels. The chinese cannot make them. So the chinese are trying to destroy ALL of the korean TV makers. They will stop at nothing - including state subsidies, giving TVs away at below-the-cost-to-manufacture-them, to force LG & Samsung out of business. They are offering super-bright TVs with thousands of dimming zones because those are the things that OLED cannot do .. yet. They hope to drive Samsung and LG out of business before these irresponsibly over-bright almost-on-fire Chinese TVs start to fail, which apparently, they are doing rather quickly, according to rtings.com .
I guess I must be an odd ball that has an OLED that over 5 years old?
In fact I bought another one in March..the Sony A95L..Spectacular TV to my eyes
Rtings seems to like it as well..stating this
"The Sony A95L is one of the absolute best TVs that money can buy. Offering a perfect combination of impressive picture quality and a wide range of features for everything from streaming shows to playing games, there's not much else on the market that even comes close."
https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/sony/a95l-oled
I am also not seeing where these ultra bright LED's fail , in longevity tests, more so than their dimmer brand counterparts
It does seem that brands like samsung perform better than TCL and Hisense
I would also have to ask myself is this real world in my environment and therefore is it relevant
Costco has the 65" for $699 through 12/8. Comes with 5 year warranty, Google play $50 gift card and also qualifies for Costco multiple order discount.
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As for QM7 vs. QM8. Are you really watching in a room that's got full sunlight, and you're watching all the time in mid-day? And you know that the average TV needs that 1000+ nits brightness like, once per 2 hours for about 3-5 seconds, for that one explosion in Mad Max : Fury Road . Is it really worth the extra $200 for that? I mean, seriously? Also, when ALL of the high-power Mini-Leds (from Hisense AND TCL) are wearing out EARLY on the rtings.com long-term tests, are you sure you want a Mini-Led that lasts just as short as an OLED ?? I did a calculation and you're paying $56 per hour of super-bright 1000-nits operation if what I'm saying about the frequency in movies is correct - over the lifetime of the TV.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7...LTM
Hisense and TCL are trying to destroy the OLED market. LG (and now Samsung - with QD-OLED) are the only companies that can make OLED panels. The chinese cannot make them. So the chinese are trying to destroy ALL of the korean TV makers. They will stop at nothing - including state subsidies, giving TVs away at below-the-cost-to-manufacture-them, to force LG & Samsung out of business. They are offering super-bright TVs with thousands of dimming zones because those are the things that OLED cannot do .. yet. They hope to drive Samsung and LG out of business before these irresponsibly over-bright almost-on-fire Chinese TVs start to fail, which apparently, they are doing rather quickly, according to rtings.com .
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