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The 65NANO906NA 65" 4K Ultra HD NanoCell Smart TV combines cutting-edge technology with stunning visuals and immersive sound, making it the perfect centerpiece for your home entertainment setup.
G**K
Excellent TV
Have had this tv for 2 weeks now and it is excellent, I will try to cover most of the points without waffling on for too long.In terms of Picture Quality if your going to be watching alot of standard definition content from a aerial for example then its still going to look poor this tv like most tv's has no magic solution to make poor content look amazing, If however you watch mainly HD and or 4K content this tv will provide a amazing picture especially HDR Content since it supports HDR10 & Dolby Vision and has a 10 bit panel.On the subject of gaming this TV is up there with the best including Oleds which is one of the reasons I went for it, It has the same low input lag of around 13ms and has the 100Hz screen and latest HDMI 2.1 ports to take advantage of what the new consoles will offer.When it comes to Apps all the main apps are available including Amazon / Netflix / Rakuten / Disney+ / BBC iPlayer / YouTube etc the only app I couldn't see was ITV Hub although for me personally thats not a loss.The remote is a Magic Remote which has been around for a while but if you don't already know it can be used like a pointer and also has the ability of allowing you to talk to your remote to use Amazon Alexa or to do a voice search on YouTube etc.Now let's talk about the subject of Black Level which seems to be the be all end all of tv's at the moment I went and viewed a Nano86 which is a cheaper Nanocell tv which doesn't have Full Array Local Dimming and it was right next too a LG Oled and honestly in that situation you could tell the difference when it came to showing black but this Nano90 is far better than the 86 I viewed and without a Oled next to it I don't think anyone is going to complain about the black level (unless you get a faulty tv) i have taken a photo to show what a image looks like with a black background you be the judge (there is some reflection on the tv because the photo was taken in a bright room on a sunny day)For me personally Oled's are a bit overated i could not justify spending alot more money on a 65" oled which is no better in terms of gaming etc just for slightly better black and its own set of issues like worrying about Screen Burn and image retention etcI easily recommend this tv its the best tv I could find for the price and imo competes with tvs that cost alot more
L**S
Great substitute on a lower budget to OLED.
Wouldn't call myself an expert,but I have had a number of good quality TVs previously.Picture I'm very happy with, havnt seen it hooked up to a games console but leave that to the kids these days 🤣
R**R
Good viewing angle.
Great picture , good viewing angles very pleased.
P**A
Excellent price without compromising performance.
Which? Magazine Best Buy. Slightly less performance than the OLED range, but you’re only going to notice if you are a full on cinephile tech head with 20/20 vision. Excellent 4K and HD performance. Cinema and Filmmaker modes ensure you don’t get that “documentary” look that makes everything look a bit “too” real.The OLED version that beats this is a grand more expensive. Save yourself a few quid and get this instead. It’s a beast.
S**N
Shame about the build quality
Unfortunately the TV had a dead area of backlights at the bottom left of centre which was very obvious when viewing programmes with a light background colour. I did take pictures and played some test screen videos and took photos and videos but neither Amazon or Crampton & Moore have asked for them and there isn’t an option on the review
R**N
A brave failure from LG
Perhaps surprisingly for a mainstream 2020 product there are no reviews for this television on Amazon, so I’ll go first.I’ve lived with the 65 inch version of this television for a month now and although it does many things extremely well, it also has several serious flaws that completely undermine its credibility as a cheaper alternative to OLED. Note that its out-the-box settings are all way off calibration, and will need adjusting – I used the Disney WoW blu-ray disk to set it up in Expert Mode then copied the settings across all inputs.The first flaw is its performance in standard definition Freeview, which is appalling. It doesn’t seem able to cope with a low-def picture and produces a blocky, streaky mess that can’t deal with any form of fast up/down, left/right panning motions - typical examples of this would be from “Homes under the Hammer” and its ilk. Even applying all the motion smoothing variations doesn’t help. On the Freeview HD channels it’s much, much better, and this television is capable of producing a stunningly lifelike picture in daylight.The second flaw appears as soon as daylight disappears and it has to deal with a darkened room. It has the worst backlight bleed I’ve ever seen on an IPS panel, with blacks all varying shades of grey with no uniformity across the screen. This is where LG have tried to use technology as a fix to a well-known issue with LCD backlit panels by introducing Full Array Local Dimming. I spent a lot of time switching this on/off at differing levels and found “medium” to work best at bringing back uniform blacks without crushing the life out of it. At this setting there was some mild light blooming across the different backlight zones in a darkened room at 1080p, and although irritating at times it wasn’t a show stopper.The third flaw is the most serious, and has had me tearing the hair out my ears trying to find a way round it. This is in its performance at 4k with HDR. The opening sequence of Clint Eastwood’s movie “Unforgiven” in 4K has a left/right pan across a Western town at night where the only light sources are lanterns. The HDR10/Dolby Vision enhancement on the 4K over the 1080p is in the luminescence of the lanterns, and this causes HUGE backlight blooming as the FALD zones light up and shut down. It actually makes the sequence unwatchable in a darkened room. I only have a limited few 4K Blu-ray disks, but soon discovered that it happens on all of them once HDR is initiated by this television. The FALD technology only has 32 zones and this doesn’t appear to be anywhere near enough to cope with HDR enhancement on 4K – probably 10x this required. I have tried every variation possible in the settings menus, but to no avail. A television which was bought to provide 4K HDR images in a darkened room turns out to be a failure in its core purpose. The only workable solution I have found is to attach an LED strip light to the back of the television as an “ambilight”. This kills the visibility of the backlight blooming, but unfortunately also kills the darkened room home cinema experience I was hoping for with this television.My final thoughts with this television are “should have bought an OLED instead”. However, the idea of spending a lot more money on something that may only last a year before image burn-in turns it into a 65 inch wall-mirror scares me even more. This television was a mistake that I’ll have to learn to live with.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
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