I’m into Samsung good
Looking for a cut-price alternative to the Korean giant’s wildly expensive QLED televisions? This 50in bargain seems to have you covered…
£699 / stuff.tv/au9000
■ The AU9000 range is all about prodigious value for money. This 50in set is as well made as you’d expect from Samsung, and at just under 26mm it’s shallower in profile than most because LED backlighting is arranged around the edge of the screen, rather than the whole of the rear.
■ Like every 4K HDR Samsung TV it snubs Dolby Vision – a pity when the Dolby-following Netflix is front and centre of the interface. Still, Tizen is brilliant – a clear and logical UI that hasn’t changed because they got it largely right first time.
■ Three HDMI inputs (one of them earc-enabled for use with any worthwhile soundbar) plus a pair of USB 2.0 sockets, a CI card slot and an Ethernet port should be enough connectivity for most people. There’s dual-band Wi-fi and Bluetooth 5.2 too.
■ Whether it’s motion-handling, contrast, edge-definition or low-light detail, the AU9000 is currently the outstanding mainstream proposition. Huawei’s Vision S (reviewed last issue) can’t lay a glove on the picture quality, while LG, Panasonic and Sony can’t match it either for the price.
■ It’s not a perfect fit for new consoles (see right), and the sound is weak, necessitating a soundbar; but if you want a new TV simply to watch telly, this is, pound for pound, among the very best around.
Tech specs
Screen 50in 3840x2160 LED
OS Tizen Connectivity Wi-fi, Bluetooth 5, 3x HDMI, 2x USB, Ethernet, optical HDR formats HLG, HDR10, HDR10+ Dimensions 1119x645x25.7mm, 11.5kg
Samsung big
A true mainstream TV needs to cater for the masses. This one also comes in 43, 55, 65 and 75in versions so you can find a size to suit you.
Let it spree
You can update the OB-4 via TE’S app, with new features promised and the disk function designated a ‘public research space’.