Looking at a new LED 65 inch TV. Noticed the refresh rates vary from 60 to 240. I do watch sports and wonder if a refresh rate of 60 is OK? Ed
My first 4K T.V. a couple years ago was a 55" Insignia (Best Buy house brand).
It was so much better then the 10 year old non 4K Sony I was very happy with it.
The Insignia went bad and Best Buy could not fix it do to a shortage of parts per their 30 day repair or replace policy.They said bring it back and get a new one.
I decided to take the credit and pay a bit more to upgrade to a Samsung 4K.
The Samsung was so much better then the Insignia.
Bottom line is buy the most expensive model you can afford.
As you go up in price everything about the T.V. gets better.
Next stop for me is Oled.
According to RTINGS, broadcast TV is usually 30-60Hz, with things like movies being 24Hz. Watching 24, 30, or 60Hz stuff on a 120hz tv will give you that soap opera effect you may or may not like. For sports you want a low response time to minimize motion blur, refresh rate doesn’t effect response time.
What is the Refresh Rate? 60Hz vs 120Hz
A TV's refresh rate is how many times the screen refreshes itself every second, and it's different from frames per second (fps), which defines how many frames the sources displays every second.www.rtings.com
People should buy a TV for the display (picture) quality only. Forget apps, forget "smart" TVs as that is nothing but marketing for dollars.Depends. Marginal price increases might net stuff like more inputs or perhaps more features. Pretty much all TVs are smart TVs these days with built-in capability to connect to the internet and run streaming apps. However, I think the support for apps are better with the big names like Samsung, LG, or Sony. Not sure how well Hisense, Vizio, TCL, etc. work with regards to smart TV apps.
I spent less than $400 on a 55" that I'm perfectly happy with. The only thing I'm worried about is total dependence on the remote. I know I can program a universal remote in a pinch, but it won't be an exact match with some buttons that are needed to access certain features.
I could have spent twice as much on the same size with great features, but I didn't really need that.
People should buy a TV for the display (picture) quality only. Forget apps, forget "smart" TVs as that is nothing but marketing for dollars.
Why on earth would anyone buy a TV based on what Apps or system it runs on?
Seems crazy to make a decision to buy a TV, spend hundreds or thousands of dollars for a device that cost $50 that will connect you to the internet. Not only that, the $50 device will work far BETTER then ANYTHING that comes built in with the TV.
We have a $1600 Sony 4k. I do not connect it to the internet. I do not use any of the built in system. I plug in a 4 k Roku player with the latest and greatest hardware and software.
The system that comes with a TV is completely free to the TV maker, cost pennies to include it. You can buy your own system for a few dollars to up to a whole $100 and it is far, far superior.
Moral of the story is, if a $200 TV makes you happy or a $8000 TV makes you happy buy your own device to stream and connect to the internet. it will be a far better experience. ANY Roku player at any price beats anything built into a TV,
Someone else will answer better than me. Always felt built-ins were a bit like buying a laptop. I have a small box computer. Screen or keyboard craps out I get another one. My ROKU box craps out, I get another one. So far my ROKU's have not lasted as long as my TV's. Now if a built in ROKU in a smart TV can be easily bypassed by a replacement box then there's no reason not to buy one.I use the smart TV features built in to my Samsung (couple years old) and I have no problems watching Prime,Netflix,Hulu and Disney.
What advantage would Roku give me?
This is 2020 and hertz game is pretty much meaningless today. Today's TV's have much faster CPU's and don't have the issues of flat panel TV's from who knows, 4+ years ago unless you buy the cheapest TV you can find.
What matters the most is built in sound quality if you don't use a soundbar.
The majority of flat panel TV's don't have good sound quality, but a few do.
My high end Sony has horrible built in sound quality which forced me to buy a soundbar and accompanying subwoofer.
My LG has a built in subwoofer at the rear of the TV and does great.