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  2. Jul 9, 2024 · TCL Q7/Q750G QLED: The TCL Q7/Q750G QLED is a very good QLED TV, but like the TCL QM8/QM850G QLED, it's buggy, with poor upscaling capabilities and terrible color accuracy pre-calibration. The Hisense U7N is a much better TV overall and is of better value.

    • Best Led TVs

      TCL Q6/Q651G QLED: The TCL Q6/Q651G QLED is a decent TV from...

  3. Sep 22, 2020 · Should I buy a Samsung QLED TV? Generally speaking, if you're in the market for a TV, Samsung's QLED TVs are a good choice, and provide decent value for the money.

    • Brian Westover
  4. Sep 16, 2024 · In our side-by-side comparison reviews, OLED beats QLED every time. None of the QLED TVs we've tested, including the Samsung QN90B, the TCL QM8 or the Amazon Fire TV Omni QLED, look as good...

    • Overview
    • What does QLED mean?
    • What is Ultra HD?
    • But do you need Ultra HD?
    • How does QLED work? Is it different than OLED?
    • What is Neo QLED? Mini LED? Micro LED?
    • Should you buy a 4K Ultra HD QLED TV?
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    News

    By Jamie Carter

    last updated 14 July 2022

    Why settle for one when you can have both?

    (Image credit: Samsung)

    Should you buy a QLED TV or an Ultra HD TV? If you’re in the mood for buying a new television, you’ve likely come across both of these terms. What do they mean? Do you need them? Is it possible to get both?

    QLED, if you've never heard of it before, is basically a souped-up LED-LCD TV of the kind that have been around for decades.

    QLED stands for quantum-dot light-emitting diode. Although Samsung makes a lot of different kinds of TVs, QLED TV is its mass-produced premium panel technology, as you can see if you examine this year’s new Samsung TVs.

    On the other hand, Ultra HD is a TV feature found across the board on new TVs of about 40-inches in size. Short for 'ultra high definition', Ultra HD usually refers to TVs with a 4K resolution. You’ll hear people referring to Ultra HD TVs and 4K TVs, but they're exactly the same thing.

    In terms of sharpness they’re now firmly in the mainstream, having taken over from softer full HD TVs, but not as detailed as next-generation 8K TVs.

    For now, Ultra HD 4K TVs are the sweet spot for big screen TVs both in terms of technology and price, though whether you also go for QLED is more complicated. For example, Samsung manufacturers 4K QLED TVs, but also 4K LED TVs, Micro LED TVs and the rather confusingly-named Neo QLED TVs (QLED, but with a Mini LED backlight).

    “Ultra HD” refers to a 4K digital cinema standard, while “4K” tends to be used for consumer-grade TVs for the home. Either way, 4K is now the most common pixel resolution for a TV. Ultra HD TVs use a panel with 3840 x 2160 pixels, which is known as 2160p, but also as 4K because of images are almost 4,000 pixels wide.

    Yes – if only because it will be a default feature on almost every TV from about 40-inches in size and larger – unless you go for a very expensive 8K model or a very small TV. So unless you’re looking for a 32-inch TV, perhaps for a bedroom, you’re almost certainly going to be looking for an Ultra HD 4K TV.

    Though native 4K sources of content are few, they’re now growing quickly. You'll find native 4K content on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney Plus, Hulu, Rakuten TV, and other TV streaming services land as well as Ultra HD Blu-ray Discs, while Apple TV 4K, PlayStation 4 Pro, PlayStation 5 and the Xbox Series X all deal in native 4K content.

    QLED TVs use a ‘quantum dot’ filter. Made from ultra-small semi-conductor particles that can be precisely controlled, these quantum dot filters can be very precisely controlled for color output, essentially helping to create a brighter image and a broader colour spectrum. 

    So if you see a 4K LED TV and a 4K QLED TV, the rule of thumb says that the QLED TV is going to be better in terms of colour accuracy. Although most QLED TVs are sold by Samsung, it does also supply them to TCL and Hisense. 

    OLED vs QLED is an oft-asked question asked by those wanting to buy a premium TV, but it’s largely based on a misunderstanding of what a QLED TV is. QLED’s close-in-the-alphabet name makes it seems like a straight-up alternative to OLED (organic light-emitting diode) technology, but they are radically different. 

    The pixels in a QLED TVs are illuminated by an old-fashioned backlight (either direct LED backlighting and edge-lighting). Consequently, QLED TVs don’t show black areas of images as well as OLED TVs do. That’s because OLED TVs control each individual pixel, and they’re thinner, to boot. OLED TVs also give much superior viewing angles, more fluid fast motion and better black levels, meaning they're generally better for movies.

    As you may have noticed, Samsung employs armies of marketing creatives to come up with bamboozling terminology, the latest of which is Neo QLED. Found in Samsung's 2021 TV range, it’s Samsung’s own name for something that a lot of TV makers are using – Mini LED. Mini LED TVs use a ‘micro layer’ over the backlight to guide the light of the Mini LEDs through the same quantum dots used in QLED TVs. The end result is more control over brightness control. 

    Micro LED is a brand new (and massively expensive) TV panel technology that threatens to banish QLED to history … maybe. It’s been around since Samsung airred ‘The Wall’ Micro LED in 2018, though early in 2021 saw the debut of Samsung’s Micro LED TV in 110-inch, 99-inch and 88-inch sizes. 

    If you’re set on QLED, go for Samsung’s best QLED TVs. For the price, we quite like last year's Samsung Q80T QLED that will set you back $1,199 / £1,099 (around AU$1,500). However, move up a notch and you’ll find that only some of Samsung’s 8K TVs – such as the Q800T and the Q950TS – use QLED panel tech. 

    If, however, you’re not bothered about QLED and just want a 4K TV, look for the best 4K TVs covering technologies including QLED and OLED, and encompassing brands like LG, Panasonic, Sony and Philips, as well as Samsung. 

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  5. Dec 11, 2023 · 1. You're shopping with affordability in mind. Samsung's Crystal UHD televisions don't boast as many features as its QLED models, but they're noticeably more affordable. With some light browsing,...

  6. Feb 25, 2023 · Best Budget QLED TV: Hisense U6H. Best QLED TV for Gaming: TCL R655. Best QLED TV for Movies: Hisense U8H. Best 65-inch QLED TV: Samsung QN90B. QLED TVs promise to offer fantastic picture quality, but in a market full of televisions with quantum dot technology, it can be hard to choose the best.

  7. Aug 23, 2024 · QLED TVs are made by companies like Samsung, Sony, TCL, and Hisense. Who would benefit the most from a QLED TV? Pretty much anyone who loves a bright picture with lots of boldness and punch...