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Hisense 65U7HQTUK 65" 600-nit 4K HDR10+ and 120Hz Dolby Vision IQ ULED Smart TV with Disney+, Freeview Play and Alexa Built-in, HDMI 2.1 and Filmmaker Mode, FreeSync Certificated (2022 NEW)

£499.5£999.00Clearance
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TO THE FULLEST EXTENT NOT PROHIBITED BY APPLICABLE LAW, IF YOU CLAIM THAT YOU HAVE INCURRED ANY LOSS, DAMAGES, OR INJURIES IN CONNECTION WITH YOUR USE OF THE DEVICE, THEN THE LOSSES, DAMAGES, AND INJURIES WILL NOT BE DEEMED IRREPARABLE OR SUFFICIENT TO ENTITLE YOU TO AN INJUNCTION OR TO OTHER EQUITABLE RELIEF OF ANY KIND. THIS MEANS THAT, IN CONNECTION WITH YOUR CLAIM, YOU AGREE THAT YOU WILL NOT SEEK, AND THAT YOU WILL NOT BE PERMITTED TO OBTAIN, ANY COURT OR OTHER ACTION THAT MAY INTERFERE WITH OR PREVENT THE DEVELOPMENT OR EXPLOITATION OF ANY DEVICE, APPLICATION, CONTENT, SUBMITTED CONTENT, PRODUCT, SERVICE, OR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS OWNED, LICENSED, USED OR CONTROLLED BY US (INCLUDING YOUR SUBMITTED CONTENT) OR OUR LICENSORS. For people with less lofty expectations, this screen will likely be an attractive one, especially if you factor in its multi-HDR support. Its SDR performance is satisfying and its HDR performance can be impressive. I’m interested to see what Hisense does with its 2021 TV range. You should buy the Hisense 65U8QFTUK if… Watching Pacific Rim (again) via the Panasonic UB820 4K player, the Hisense delivers on the film’s expressive colours and sense of scale. As Jaeger and Kaiju go fist-to-fist, there’s an intensity to colours and a good degree of accuracy, too. The image isn’t as cinematic as the Panasonic TX-65HX940, but it’s striking nonetheless. Hisense TVs with Quantum Dot technology are called QLED by the company. Other TVs, like this one, are called ULED – which refers to TVs with ‘ultra-wide colour gamut’, ‘ultra local dimming’, ‘ultra 4K resolution’ and ‘ultra smooth motion rate’ – at least three of which are also offered by its QLED TVs. ULED TVs don’t always have Quantum Dot technology – this one does, but it’s not a QLED TV, it’s ULED.

Content” means all audio and visual elements and ideas offered by us or third parties, including but not limited to, data, movies, videos, photographs, software, games, designs, likenesses, artwork, images, music, sound, information and other materials, tangible and intangible, including derivative works, on all media and formats, existing or in future. The Hisense uses the company’s proprietary VIDAA smart TV platform, here in its ‘U7’ guise. It covers the whole screen, which is seldom a good idea, but it’s fully loaded with catch-up and streaming service apps of lesser or greater importance – and they’re all the best version of themselves, too, which is handy. Item number V8AYK TheHisense 65U7HQTUK65 inch Quantum Dot 4KSmart TV gives you truly epic home entertainment. SUPERB PICTURE QUALITY

Audio Quality

There’s blooming off-axis and, disappointingly, a slight shift in seating is all that’s needed for it to manifest. Also a problem is a green tint to shadows. You can see a green emphasis on the wall behind Peter Parker in Spider-Man: Far From Home in the Dolby Vision Dark profile that isn’t apparent in the Dolby Vision Bright mode – and this issue ranges from slight to more visible, depending on the content. BBC Sounds and UEFA TV have been added, while the likes of Apple TV, Disney Plus, Spotify and Tidal remain unsupported.

The 65U8HQ uses Quantum Dots to make its colours rather than typical LED filters, opening the door to an expanded colour gamut to go with its high Mini LED-inspired brightness, while pictures have the potential to be enhanced by Hisense’s new Hi-View processing engine, tendrils of which extend into multiple image areas. The TV doesn’t just get decently bright — it offers relatively accurate color reproduction for a TV in this price range. The TV didn’t quite match much more expensive TVs, like the Samsung QN90B, but it did match or beat most of the direct competition. While the Hisense U7H covered 99.84% of the Rec. 709 color gamut in standard mode, beating the Vizio M-Series Quantum’s 99.62%. In HDR, it covered 91.95% of the P3 color gamut, which may not sound that high but is actually quite impressive. That’s compared to the Vizio M-Series Quantum’s 91.07%. It’s a little lower than the TCL 6-Series’ 92.92%.If you want much better input lag, you need to spend substantially more. The LG C2 and Samsung QN90B have 1.5ms and 1.4ms latency, respectively, but they can also easily cost twice as much as the U7H. The HDMIs’ flexibility also impresses when it comes to HDR support, as they prove capable of handling both the Dolby Vision and HDR10+‘premium’ HDR formats on top of the HDR10 and HLG stalwarts. Many premium TVs only support Dolby Vision or HDR10+ , not both, yet it’s only if a TV has both that you can be sure you’re always getting the best potential quality from any source you play into it. The 65U8QFTUK proves to be a solid upscaler of sub-4K content, but at this size, a 1080p image stretched to 65 inches reveals a deficit in clarity and sharpness. The Panasonic 65HZ1000 OLED was similar – and despite the 65U8QF boasting AI optimisation with its Hi-View chip – the results aren’t as good as the best TVs on the market. That’s all despite offering a great level of brightness, both in day-to-day viewing and in our lab testing. In Filmmaker HDR mode (usually the mode built to be the most accurate), the TV delivered peak brightnesses that outshone much of the competition, though more so when more brightness was required for larger portions of the display. For example, it delivered a brightness of 614 nits at 100% of the display, beating the Samsung QN65 and TCL 6-Series Roku TV, but not quite reaching the heights of the 888-nit Hisense U8H.

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