7 budget 4K TVs you can buy in South Africa
Check out these budget UHD TVs available in South Africa right now.
7 budget 4K TVs you can buy in South Africa
Check out these budget UHD TVs available in South Africa right now.
The link in Tapatalk redirects to the IP site 0.0.0.7, thought you should know [MENTION=23338]RyanBrothwell[/MENTION]
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No probs dude/dudette/dudebot/dudehamster
So, question is now, with a price of R6999 for a 50 inch 4K TV, why would I consider something more expensive at almost twice the price, if all I'm going to do is connect a console to it with hopefully a Project Scorpio in the future? Is there going to be such a down side on quality of service or quality of picture that I, a person with no working knowledge or care on the difference of minute details in screen, would feel buyers remorse? I totally understand that there will be a quality disparity between the Sinotech and the Samsung screens, but would it be so big as to warrant paying R4k more?
I feel like you maybe answered your own question in that you're not necessarily the type of person who cares about the minute differences in visual quality. While more expensive doesn't always equate to "better", it's a safe bet that a R12,000 Samsung is more likely to be of a higher overall quality than a R7k Hisense.
Fair enough. I think I'm just left uneasy justifying the purchase of a cheaper TV set while there are issues like input lag, image processor speed, upscaling issues etc. that I keep on hearing when people talk about TV's. I think more research is needed on my part as to what these aspects actually mean in implementation and feel. For now though, I am still saving for a 4k set and would rather then save a bit longer and get a better quality set.