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ATL96Steeler
Well-Known Member
Well gang...My 60" Plasma was still working but has been promised to my son when he moves out (hopefully in a few months).
So...I took advantage of a Black Friday deal and bought a new set. I had been researching for a few weeks and btw Rtings.com is one of the better TV review sites I found. We have two Sony 4k TVs and I think Sony one of the better pictures for LED TVs, but sitting 13' away from the TV wall, I was looking for a larger set not really the best picture.
I wanted the Samsung 82" 82NU8000...the out going model...8.1 overall from Rtings. B&H had one instock and would sell for $2200, but I had to pay shipping...not good. The 86" LG was tempting for $1500. The LG picture is nice, more natural like a Sony, but the LG LEDs look more washed out in comparison.
I ended up with the 82" 82RU8000, the newer model, but it doesn't have the same local dimming 7.9 overall from Rtings…$1799.00
1st Impression
Out of box pic quality (PQ)....3 of 5...eco was the default mode. Switching to "normal" mode of the 3 setting options I found to be the best. Dynamic was a bit too intense for me.
Calibrated picture quality...4 of 5...I've yet to try the Rtings.com calibrated settings, but I'm content for now. 4k content looks great. HDR content does not really improve PQ by leaps and bound on this TV.
Setup...5 of 5...I plan on streaming 95% of my TV content so I opted for a Ethernet connection (1 Gig speed). Within 5 mins I had the TV up and running.
Apps...4 of 5...the major players (Netflix, Prime, AppleTV, etc) are built in, pretty easy to add new apps via the app store.
Operating...4 of 5...the processor is much faster than the Sony OS...TV turns on and off, cycles thru apps much quicker than the Sony TV.
1st Impression...4 of 5...not a premium TV, but for >80" set under $2k ($1799), it's hard to beat. Note...both Amazon and Best Buy have gone back up to $1997.
So...I took advantage of a Black Friday deal and bought a new set. I had been researching for a few weeks and btw Rtings.com is one of the better TV review sites I found. We have two Sony 4k TVs and I think Sony one of the better pictures for LED TVs, but sitting 13' away from the TV wall, I was looking for a larger set not really the best picture.
I wanted the Samsung 82" 82NU8000...the out going model...8.1 overall from Rtings. B&H had one instock and would sell for $2200, but I had to pay shipping...not good. The 86" LG was tempting for $1500. The LG picture is nice, more natural like a Sony, but the LG LEDs look more washed out in comparison.
I ended up with the 82" 82RU8000, the newer model, but it doesn't have the same local dimming 7.9 overall from Rtings…$1799.00
1st Impression
Out of box pic quality (PQ)....3 of 5...eco was the default mode. Switching to "normal" mode of the 3 setting options I found to be the best. Dynamic was a bit too intense for me.
Calibrated picture quality...4 of 5...I've yet to try the Rtings.com calibrated settings, but I'm content for now. 4k content looks great. HDR content does not really improve PQ by leaps and bound on this TV.
Setup...5 of 5...I plan on streaming 95% of my TV content so I opted for a Ethernet connection (1 Gig speed). Within 5 mins I had the TV up and running.
Apps...4 of 5...the major players (Netflix, Prime, AppleTV, etc) are built in, pretty easy to add new apps via the app store.
Operating...4 of 5...the processor is much faster than the Sony OS...TV turns on and off, cycles thru apps much quicker than the Sony TV.
1st Impression...4 of 5...not a premium TV, but for >80" set under $2k ($1799), it's hard to beat. Note...both Amazon and Best Buy have gone back up to $1997.