84in 4K LG 3D Smart TV to land next month

by Alistair Lowe on 22 August 2012, 08:58

Tags: LG Display

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We've been talking about 4K TV for quite some time, with TVs from both Toshiba and LG showing up at CES towards the beginning of the year, new image sensors to enable affordable 4K filming and most recently, the new MPEG H.265 standard, intended to provide twice the quality-to-compression ratio over H.264, enabling higher-definition broadcast.

Despite all of these developments, aside from Toshiba and its 55ZL2, there are no other 4K TVs on the market and, arguably, could 4K resolutions truly be appreciated on a 55in television? If you think not, then perhaps LG's new 84LM9600 is for you. This TV is, as the product number suggests, a whopping 84in in size and features a 3,840 x 2,160 resolution, with 2.2 channel "3D sound" speakers.

Alas, there's currently very little 4K content available for consumers, though, this TV does also employ LG's passive 3D technology, which is both visually impressive and requires only cheap glasses, however, on current TVs suffers from a loss of resolution as each alternate line on the TV points towards a different eye. At 4K, though, the TV should be able to deliver 1080p 3D films without sacrificing effective resolution, which we suspect will deliver a rather impressive experience.

The 84LM9600 will be available world-wide from next month, however, unlike Toshiba's 55ZL2, which has a RRP of £6,999, it's looking likely that LG's new though, admittedly larger beast, will retail for at least £14,000 (this writer suspects £14,999).



HEXUS Forums :: 21 Comments

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i would definitely buy one for normal tv money
ill have one my blu ray player can upscale to 4k. I would just need to get a bigger house for it :)
Nah, 1080p is enough and apart from films would you really watch the dross (there's a few good programmes but they are few and far between) we're fed via the broadcast channels on it?
Hmmm.

I am surprised how soon they have released them. Has there even been a broadcast standard ratified for 4k yet? (Let alone any real content!)

You would also need about £2k of PC equipment to game on it at 4k….

No mention of arguably the important thing….Does it do 1080p48?
shaithis
I am surprised how soon they have released them. Has there even been a broadcast standard ratified for 4k yet? (Let alone any real content!)

Not to my knowledge, all the official standards that are in place for this resolution are based on DCinema. Doubt we will see it over the airwaves till codecs go vector based, by then it will be over IP anyway.