LG 47LW6500

LG 47LW6500

LG 47LW6500 - If you would like the depth, realism and entertainment of 3D on the theater, you may love having it at residence with LG Cinema 3D on the LG 47LW6500 TV. And it isn’t just 3D. It is crisp 3D on a superb LED Plus display. On high of that, it is locked and loaded with the just about limitless entertainment capabilities of LG Smart TV; staying in has by no means been better. That is what home entertainment is all about

This LG 47LW6500 TV was definitely worth the wait in case you are getting a 3D TV for the 1st time or considering of upgrading, have no worry that this TV will meet and exceed your expectations. The 2D picture on this LG 47LW6500 TV is totally amazing. The blacks are very black and the colors are vivid. As stated in another review, the picture setup could be very easy to do and has a couple of options primarily based upon your tastes. Up above, I mentioned that the 3D picture appears to be like best with TruMotion turned off, but haven’t any concern- the settings for 3D are separate from 2D. And each input’s options are separate from one another. The one unusual thing I discovered about altering the settings per input is that you have to hit the Residence button to be able to entry the the full settings menu. But that is no biggie.

 

Buy LG 47LW6500

LG 47LW6500 Features

FIND THE PERFECT PICTURE.

Get easy self-calibration with on-screen reference points for key picture quality elements such as black level, color, tint, sharpness and backlight levels. Take the guesswork out of picture adjustments with this simple-to-use feature. It’s not actually magic, but it will sure seem that way.

 

CUT LOOSE WHEN YOU’RE WIFI READY.

Getting your LG 47LW6500 TV connected to NetCast Entertainment Access and other online content is easy when you are WiFi Ready. If you have existing wireless broadband, setting it up is simple and you don’t need to worry about messy wires.

 

ISFCCC READY.

LG’s ISFccc Ready HDTVs contain the detailed standards necessary for professional calibration of brightness, contrast, tint, sharpness, color levels and much more to meet local lighting conditions for both daytime and nighttime viewing. Settings are added to preset modes for easy access from your LG remote.

 

EASY ACCESS TO LIMITLESS ENTERTAINMENT WITH LG SMART TV

Enjoy the easiest access to limitless entertainment like streaming movies, live sports, custom apps, games, and web browsing right on your LG 47LW6500  TV.

Disclaimer: Internet connection & some subscriptions required and sold separately.

 

[See more details here]

 

LG 47LW6500 Review

Here’s one of most helpful LG 47LW6500 review from real buyer;

 

It’s a nice set by Chris Holmes

I bought this LG 47LW6500 set about a week ago and I’ve ran it through the ringer to test out everything. So far I’m pretty impressed.

The drawbacks aren’t very many and they’re not too much of a game-changer. One, there are no audio outputs from the tv other than an optical output. If you have a legacy sound system that doesn’t have an optical input, it’s not the end of the world. For an extra ~$25 or so you can get a stereo adapter that transfers the optical signal to coax or composite RCA analog. $100 to get yourself one that’ll do dolby surround (which I had to do). It was a bit off-putting, and I was tempted to just get a new home theater system, but it was necessary for me to get (and save a couple hundred more dollars) who has a ton of extra gaming and video devices that I use. It’s easier to just run an audio out from the television to the home theater system and plug everything into the tv to not have to mess with too many settings. I think you’ll find audio output sparsity with most newer sets anyway. Digital age is taking over, I suppose. ( see alternative tv such panasonic viera tc-p60s30 here)

The 2D to 3D LG 47LW6500 features on this set are, well, hilarious. I have to commend the programmers who designed this set as I’m sure trying to write code to fit every visual situation will have a few coding hiccups, and over all it is a great feature. With very well-defined images, i.e. a strong foreground, a background, a middle ground subject, the forcing of the 3d image from a 2d image works amazingly. It doesn’t bring anything towards you, mind, but will definitely push the backgrounds back for a pretty believable and often stunning picture. But, there are times when the image on the screen gets kind of confused and makes an approximation. This happens particularly often with women’s shirts with words on them. The face will seem to come forward too far, the neck will be pushed back, the chest… well, let’s just use the word I used earlier: hilarious. Slightly exaggerated, yes perhaps, but makes you wonder if the people designing feature did it on purpose? Speculation, probably not true…dirty, dirty coders. It’s something I noticed, and others may not, but I think it’s worth mentioning. 90% positive on this feature of the set, I’ll give it.

Navigation on the LG 47LW6500 set is a little weird if you want to get through the menus. It’s designed more for the magic remote (the apps, too) I’ve found, which is pretty much just like using a Wii remote if you’re familiar with that. A traditionalist like myself tried using the regular remote which took a while trying to weed through the often clumped-together features. Plus, I’m all for the progress of technology and all, but calling 240hz TruMotion, or whatever they call it, would be easier to figure out for the laymen in the long run if you put an explanation bubble popup upon hovering over an item in the menus. Also, by not listing the 240hz feature leads to a bit more confusion as the settings on the frame refresh sensitivity go from 1 to 10. They assumed people don’t know what a hertz is, I suppose. Figuring out trumotions 1 to 10, I had to guess what I was messing with on screen.

Turning off the 240hz feature might be desirable, too, if you are annoyed at fine letters “crawling” on your screen. There was a feature in there that turned down an edge-refining in the picture which would’ve solved that problem, I think. I found it once, but I have yet to find it again. Another menu issue.

If you’re an avid gamer, like myself, you’re going to want to turn off all the nice little features that come along with this set. There is about 1/5 of a second lag on the image with doodads engaged. Halo looked pretty awesome with the forced 3D and Trumotion turned on, but that 1/5 of a second is the difference between a headshot and betrayal(s). It was a very unfortunate game I played that day.

I got a chance to look at the previous model (55LW5500) to test the passive 3D features of the old with the features on this one(55LW6500). There was talk that they would improve the 3D resolution somehow as with passive 3d you’re essentially taking a 1080 pixel image down to 540 for each eye. I read talk about improvements to this feature, and I think (comparing a couple days apart) the 3D image is improved. I wouldn’t know how they improved it as from what I can tell, the polarizing film on the screen I would have thought was set in stone, and maybe some of my own psychological want for the system to be better is creeping into the review, but I think it’s been improved. It’s hard to tell without having an active shutter 3D system in front of me with the older and newer models, but I’m pleased with the image. If you want the 3D image without the hassle of the active shutter glasses (which I did), I think this is your LG 47LW6500 set.

The LG 47LW6500 picture is great, the colors are great, LED backlighting works well, lightweight set easy to mount on a wall, picture wizard gives you a pretty good approximation of what you would want for a picture. In a phrase, I’m pleased.

 

 

 

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