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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)

£9.9£99Clearance
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You’d have to go some to find a 65-inch television as thoroughly specified as this one for less than Hisense wants for the 65U7KQTUK – so as long as it performs up to the standard of its specification rather than down to the level of its asking price, it’s going to be a winner… Availability Given the TCL is cheaper and offers more dynamic range, better tone mapping and overall picture quality, plus it has the same gaming features, eARC on an HDMI 2.0 so you keep both HDMI 2.1 ports and Google Smart TV with everything it offers, it is tough love for the Hisense in this comparison. Where this TV really shines is when used in a normal living room with some ambient lighting and watching everyday content or playing games What are your alternatives? As you would hope with a TV that combines Quantum Dots with good contrast and brightness for a mid-range TV, the U7K also delivers pretty potent colours. Tones across the board look above average (for this price level) rich and vibrant, but also, provided you avoid the TV’s most extreme picture setting, they tend to maintain a good balance, with nothing – not even heavily saturated reds or greens – drawing too much attention to itself.

Hisense U7QF (65U7QFUK) ULED 4K TV review | Trusted Reviews Hisense U7QF (65U7QFUK) ULED 4K TV review | Trusted Reviews

Dolby Vision IQ takes Dolby Vision to the next level, making it the ultimate HDR-type picture processor. Dolby Vision IQ version uses data within the signal and light sensors inside the TV to adjust the picture quality for the best contrast. This improves the picture’s brightness, without ‘washing out’ the depth. You get a consistent picture quality, however light or dark your room is. Whether you’re watching a brightly lit sports event or moody movie, Dolby Vision IQ adjusts to suit. The Hisense U7K is a good-looking TV - as much as any TV can be described that way, at least. From dead ahead its bezels are very slim, and even in profile they’re just 5mm - and they’re made of aluminium, which makes for a mildly up-market feel. Overall set depth is 77mm, which means this isn’t the wall-hangingest TV you ever saw - but it’s VESA-compatible and so that's easy enough to achieve if you fancy. It weighs a bit less than 20kg, so shouldn’t be a burden on your plastering. Hisense also now provides a dedicated Game menu screen when you’re in play mode, from which you can switch to ultra-wide aspect ratios for compatible PC games or adjust the brightness of dark picture areas exclusively, to make hidden enemies easier to spot. Finally on the gaming front, the U7K takes just 13.1ms to render 60Hz graphics when running in its Game preset – a low enough number to make it hard for you to blame screen lag for coming last in a Call Of Duty deathmatch. Upscaling is also good but SD channels do look very soft and even HD 1080 content can also look a little softer than we would like. Edges can also look a little false with broadcast material with some obvious ringing seen within certain types of content. Sports can look fluid and detailed and 4K film is also detailed, sharp and with well-defined edges. The Hisense is compatible with each and every worthwhile HDR standard, with particular highlights being HDR10+ Adaptive and Dolby Vision IQ. It’s IMAX Enhanced-certified, and also has Filmmaker mode on board.Although it’s not mentioned in the specs, streaming via Chromecast is an option. Alexa is available through the Remote Now app (iOS and Android), and it’s happy to ‘work with’ Google Assistant via external speakers. The U7Q doesn’t have a glut of smart features, but it serves anyone after the fundamentals. Step down from Full HD stuff, though, and the Hisense throws the towel in somewhat. A big screen like this displaying some 720p content or less is always going to struggle, and the 65U7KQTUK lets picture-noise intrude, lets detail go astray and gives up entirely where testing on-screen motion is concerned. Sound Quality As with almost any TV these days, the U7K is able to apply its upmarket lighting system to high dynamic range content made in the HDR10 and HLG formats. Much more unusually, though, it can also play not only both of the premium HDR10+ and Dolby Vision formats, with their extra scene by scene picture information, but also the Adaptive and IQ versions respectively of these advanced formats, where they adapt their images to ambient room conditions.

Hisense 65U7K review: an enjoyable mid-range Mini LED | What

It’s a 144Hz panel, which – in theory, at least – ought to be good news for PC gamers. And half of its four HDMI inputs are rated to the 2.1 standard with 4K/144Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium, ALLM and VRR capability. One of them is eARC-enabled, too. And the Hisense’s HDR performance is likable. Colours are bright, well balanced, and punchy in HDR Standard mode. Complexions convince and are further refined by Dolby Vision. The kids of Spider-Man: Far From Home have punch and colour to their skin tone and it adds to the Hisense’s attractive picture.American customers are in the box seat here, obviously – but no matter the territory in which you’re shopping, there’s a disconnect between the way this TV is specified and its asking price. Off the top of my head, I can’t think of a similarly specified alternative that doesn’t cost considerably more than this. Design The rest of it is nicely put together, too. It’s mostly plastic, of course – but the chassis feels sturdy enough, which is probably a big part of why the Hisense weighs 19.7kg without its stand. The stand itself is metal with a plastic facing, and it’s a sort of hoop shape that reminds me (for some reason) of the Diana fountain in Hyde Park (but on a slightly smaller scale, naturally). It ups the weight by 1kg, and it’s fairly compact – so the 65U7KQTU doesn’t need all that wide a surface to stand on. Many TV brands, including giants LG, Samsung and Sony, only tend to support either HDR10+ or Dolby Vision, not both. So it’s great to see Hisense leaving industry politics behind and simply ensuring that the U7K is equipped to receive the best version of any content you pipe into it. 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. Audio is funnelled through 2x 10W speaker system and there’s support for Dolby Atmos. This isn’t the immersive sound of soundbars and surround systems, but an attempt to produce better sound through the TV’s speakers.

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