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TCL C841K 55-inch Television, Mini LED, HDR 2000 nits, Quantum Dot, Full Array Local Dimming, IMAX Enhanced, 144Hz VRR, Dolby Vision & Atoms TV Powered by Google

£109.995£219.99Clearance
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The TCL C845C isn’t just a great TV for film lovers, it’s also a fantastic choice for gaming fanatics. It gets all the basics right, with excellent SDR and HDR performance, plus support for all of the current HDR formats, ensuring bright, accurate and detailed images when gaming. There’s even a Dolby Vision Game picture mode to keep lag to a minimum when gaming in DV. Anyway, that’s the smallest of distractions from an image which combined brilliance with excellent motion handling and being set-and-forget across a range of material. Nor is there any problem watching on the sunniest of days with ambient light streaming in, given the brightness available here, combined with the TCL’s smart settings. Take that, OLED. Continuing the 65C845K’s big specs/little price game is a claimed 2000 nits of brightness. This would be another unprecedented figure for such an affordable 65-inch TV, but actually my own measurements of more than 2,200 nits on a 10% HDR window across multiple presets show TCL’s claims to actually be conservative. Even high-end (and so far more expensive) Samsung and Sony models struggle to get beyond that. While the TCL C81 QLED isn’t the most attractive TV of 2020, it certainly isn’t ugly. The frame around the screen is narrow, and the outer edges of its rear are exceptionally slim for an LED TV. A result, no doubt, of the TV using edge-based rather than direct LED lighting (where the lights sit right behind the screen). Motion is very good for 24fps content as correct pulldown is applied with Motion switched off. 50 Hz broadcast is also good with no major issues of dropped frames or micro stutter spotted. You can apply frame interpolation which introduces plenty of soap opera effect and artefacts around fast-moving objects.

boasts a level of picture and sound performance that would normally cost you hundreds, even thousands of pounds more." In today’s fast-paced world, where technology continually evolves, the quest for the perfect home entertainment experience never ends. If you’re in the market for a new television that promises to redefine your viewing pleasure, look no further. Enter the TCL C841K 65-inch Mini LED TV, a technological marvel that combines cutting-edge features with stunning visual brilliance. In this article, we’ll take an in-depth look at this impressive TV, exploring its exceptional qualities, its pros, and its few cons. Join us on a journey to uncover the future of home entertainment with the TCL C841K. Visual Marvel: The Power of Mini LED TechnologyTCL’s televisions can differ by market, especially between UK/Europe and the models that appear in the US and Australia. This year we gather that the European and UK versions of the C835 will be technically identical (the previous C825 had a key difference in the UK), while Australia got to meet the new range first, with the C835 range officially available from 1 June 2022. The initials stand for The Creative Life and the state-owned Chinese manufacturer typically targets the affordable end of the TV market, though it nevertheless employs some serious technology to rival some of the bigger brands. Xbox Series X and some PC gamers will also be pleased to find a Dolby Vision Game preset, so you don’t have to put up with a sluggish experience when gaming in DV, while a dedicated Game Bar menu system provides both information on your gaming signal and a couple of game-specific features. This includes a Shadow Enhancement feature that elevates the brightness of dark game areas to make it easier to spot lurking enemies, and an onscreen aiming assistant. The first thing that strikes me like a ray of sunshine from the budget TV gloom is how incredibly bright its pictures are. That 2200+ nits of measured brightness feeds fully into real world (rather than test signal) HDR images, making daylight sequences feel like genuine daylight, and bright highlights look like real moons, streetlights, suns, metallic reflections etc have somehow found their way inside your TV.

Here we did experience a downside to handing setup over to Google Home: it rarely works perfectly. When it got to the Wi-Fi connection, for example, the TV announced it was connected. But the Google Home app said it had failed and we should try again. We had no choice – we had to keep using the app to get through the setup, so we had to do it again. Happily, the second time it worked and we could move on.Settings can also be accessed from the remote, popping up a box with a few key settings (including Picture), but for the rest you have to press a second settings icon inside the first.

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