For a minute there after I voted I thought Sony was really popular. Then I realized I was first!
We have 2 Sony TVs, one 32 and on I think 48. The small one is about 4 or 5 years old. They both work great, have all the features I wanted, and we got them from Amazon for a good price.
I have 2 Samsungs, a 61 in the living room and a 19 in the bedroom. They are both great tvs and were highly rated. I’ve had them for 4 or 5 years without any issues.
Sony had a massive injection of stupid when they got an American management team and the quality of their product plummeted. Korea is where Japan was in the 80s, concentrating on building market share by having a reputation for quality.
One of my clients is a sports bar, and we have standardized on LG sets, and have had excellent results. Their TVs are on from 10 AM to 3 AM, seven days a week. and they have been working for years. I personally have a Samsung, and I’ve had equally good luck with it. I’ve also had amazing service as well. My 53" LCD was zapped by a lightening strike, and Samsung sent a tech to my apartment to service it.
One thing though. Do NOT get a “Smart TV”. Get a dumb TV and an external box. The people who make external boxes have every reason to improve their product. The TV makers have every reason to sell you a new TV. You smart TV will be stuck at the capabilities you have right now. Maybe one or two updates will happen over the course of the first year, but after that , the Execu-Droids will kill the upgrade program, and your “Smart” TV will get, reletively speaking, dumber and dumber. It will be like being stuck with a computer that cannot use a current web browser, suck on Mozilla 0.96.
You can get a Roku and a Logitech Harmony remote and produce a much Smarter TV.
No, it’s based on opening Sony products and discovering that they were actually shitty Chinese V-Tech guts with a Sony case. I object to buying crappy products at double the price. Sony Broadcast is still excellent, but the whole bottom three-quarters of Sony’s consumer product line is made in non-Sony factories. And that is directly related to when Howard Stringer took over.
Our five-year-old 52" Samsung has had to be repaired twice due to failing capacitors, an apparently pervasive manufacturing problem that spurred a class-action lawsuit and settlement. We did get (some of) the repair costs reimbursed, but it’s definitely made me think twice about purchasing another Samsung TV.
Our 50" Panasonic is 5 years old and going strong. It’s a plasma, but I’ve owned a few other Panasonic products and never once had issues, so I trust the brand.
The general rule of thumb right now is that Panasonic is making the best plasmas on the market, and Samsung has the best LCDs. If you have the scratch to pay for them, you’re not going to go wrong with that logic.
I have a 50" Panasonic plasma, about the same vintage as Barkis. it has given me 0 issues and I love it. Unless it explodes and kills me, my next TV will be another Panasonic.
I don’t think it matters really. We have an Insignia, which is the store brand of Future Shop I believe. It’s 3 years old and works like a charm. Pay more for a name brand if you want, but the display is probably made by Samsung and the electronics manufactured by the same contract manufacturer.
I’ve got an 8 year old 50" Panasonic plasma, and it’s still running strong. No service issues, picture is still bright & clear. Inspired me to buy another Panny earlier this year.
Philips and Samsung are essentially the same (the display is made by Samsung). Most of the other brands share displays/and or electronics. Beware of some of the lesser-known brands-low quality components/short life.
I just read somewhere that Panasonic is planning to exit the TV business. Apparently, profit margins on TVs are tiny, and Panasonic decided that there’s no money to be made with them.
Until that time, here’s another Panasonic Viera plasma owner, 58", that’s completely satisfied. Zero issues. When calibrated the blacks are as true as one could ever wish for. I’ve also got a 60" Sony LCD. Frankly, I prefer the plasma and no bulbs to replace every few years.
I voted Samsung but I prefer plasma over led. Just look at the black, you can only get a very dark grey with led. The old burn in issues have been resolved as well.
Nope - they’re leaving the mid-range TV market, and focusing their efforts on larger (50+") displays. There’s not much to make in the mid-size range, because there are so many off-brands doing a decent job. As the size increases, the production line needs to be much better at QC - and that’s where the top brands really shine.