🔥 Elevate your living room with OLED brilliance and AI-powered smarts!
The LG OLED65C1PUB is a 65-inch 4K UHD OLED TV featuring a 120Hz refresh rate, α9 Gen 4 AI Processor for enhanced picture and sound, Dolby Vision IQ and Atmos for cinematic quality, Alexa built-in for smart control, and WiSA Ready for premium wireless audio. Designed for immersive entertainment and seamless smart home integration.
Brand Name | LG |
Item Weight | 71.9 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 9.9 x 57 x 33.9 inches |
Item model number | OLED65C1PUB |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | Yes |
Color Name | Black |
Special Features | α9 Gen 4 AI Processor 4K with AI Picture Pro/Sound Pro; Dolby Vision IQ and Dolby Atmos; webOS and ThinQ AI with Magic Remote |
Speaker Type | 2.2 Channel |
Item Weight | 71.9 Pounds |
Standing screen display size | 64.5 Inches |
Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
M**R
Stunning picture but mediocre documentation
This replaced a Samsung 60" from 2017. That was an early model 4K and towards the lower end of the various Samsung lines. The picture from this compared to that is stunning - the blacks are the thing that really jump out. On a 4K Dolby Vision source it is revelatory.What I can't comment on because we don't use:- SmartTV features. We didn't use them with Samsung either - we use Google TV with Chromecast so that the UI is the same across TV brands and we aren't captive to a particular TV's UI. I also have low trust in the TV manufacturers to keep their Smart features updated. It is a lot cheaper to just replace the $50 Google device every couple years.- HDMI/ARC. Sadly, our Denon AVR is too old for that.- Internal speakers - never turned them on.- Dolby beyond DD 5.1, i.e. Atmos, etc.I do think that the documentation is mediocre and skinny at best - very basic stuff that you almost really don't need to know. Here are a few things it doesn't discuss:- Surround sound from the optical/TOSLINK digital output: you can get DD 5.1 from this only if set to "passthrough/bitstream" Just about every other setting will result in PCM/2 channel because their thinking is that this is for a sound bar rather than an AVR, where you are more likely to use HDMI/ARC. We use the optical out because our AVR is too old to support ARC and doesn't support 4K either. So I struggled to get DD from the optical at first. I also had to set Google TV to "auto" rather than explicitly setting it to DD or DTS. I called up LG on this issue and they told me that only PCM was available on optical. That is not true. By contrast, the Samsung put everything to the AVR as DD 5.1, regardless of whether the upstream signal was that at all.- The USB ports are switched, but with an off-delay. So if you want to power a gadget or LEDs know that the power will eventually shut off, just not when the TV is turned off.- Relative to our Samsung, the screen is fairly reflective - this TV is not great near windows during the day. It is not as bright as our 5 year old Samsung either. But at night, ooo laa laa.- This is an HDMI only TV - 1 rear-facing (HDMI 4) and 3 left facing - HDMI 1/2/3. No component or old RCA SD or S-Video. To set up our aging Denon you need RCA SD for the OSD when you aren't using HDMI. I bought a gadget here on Amazon to translate RCA video to HDMI for the rare times I need to get to the Denon's on screen menus. I do get griped by this - deciding to remove capabilities so that you need to upgrade and replace other components of your system that otherwise work fine.- The OLED features aren't explained well. Like "Comfort Mode" for example. Does that help with OLED burn-in? Not sure. Some other OLED features are better described but I can't give a high score to the UI layout - too many options greyed out based on a setting elsewhere. I think the UI designers were challenged about balancing a feature's closeness to the top level menu versus closeness to more advanced settings.- Calibration of any kind. Nada. Haven't touched that yet.- The VESA mounting holes are very low on this TV. Not a big deal but be prepared to redo your wall mount if your prior TV was centered on the mounting holes.That's all for now - just had it a week. This may sound nitpicky, but at the end of the day we are very happy with this TV.
M**S
Excellent OLED TV
Great OLED picture. Once you get the hang of the LG smart TV operating system, it has tons of features. The picture is bright enough that I can watch during daylight hours despite having a wall of windows in my viewing room. Because of the high gloss screen, reflections can be an issue on dark scenes.
M**T
very good tv
great
C**S
A fantastic TV...just be aware of the EVO panel lottery
The LG C1 is a fantastic premium television that provides a wonderful picture, with deep, rich, precise colors and incredible gaming features. Honestly, you can look at any number of reviews for it online and they'll all largely say the same thing. I don't want to go down that well-travelled road.My review will instead focus on the EVO panel lottery, which is going on behind the scenes at LG's assembly plants. What this means is that some C1s will have the new EVO panels, which are supposed to be brighter and last longer. In all actuality, you might not really notice it, especially since LG closed the loophole to "change" the C1 into an G1 via the service menu, meaning that the much ballyhooed "hack" is no longer viable.So here are the facts:1. LG C1s are being manufactured with WBC and WBE (EVO) panels. There's no way around it.2. Just because you got a WBC panel does not mean your panel is bad, but it theoretically means it will not last as long as the WBE, which has more durability and can be driven harder by the SOC, which really is a moot point, since the C1 firmware loophole was closed. So that just leaves durability.3. Given how "all over the place" brightness can be from panel to panel when it comes to the C1 series, you might actually get a WBC panel that is "brighter" than a WBE panel. It's called the panel lottery for a reason, and I've even seen CXs that are brighter than C1s and G1 (the latter of which has the EVO panel advertised).4. Just because you have a recently manufactured LG C1 doesn't mean you have an EVO panel, so please ignore people on the internet telling you otherwise. They are wrong, wrong, wrong. There's a way you can tell if a unit has an EVO panel, and it involves looking at the box, or going into the service menu, which I don't recommend. I'm intentionally not going into detail, because the whole situation is just a bit ridiculous.5. Please do not lose your mind and start returning and exchanging units in hopes of getting a WBE panel. It's silly and pointless, and you might wind up with panels that are inferior to the one you initially received.If you want a guaranteed EVO panel that will run brighter, then buy a G1 or wait for the C2...it's that simple. Do I think it's worth it? No, I don't. But you do you.If you're concerned about panel durability, therefore making the search for WBE worth it...my advice is to just buy an extended warranty.The goal is to enjoy a new TV, not run around like a madman inspecting boxes and being annoying to Amazon employees.
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