📺 Elevate your binge game with ultra-crisp 4K brilliance!
The LG 40UF770V is a 40-inch 4K Ultra HD Smart TV featuring an energy-efficient Class A rating, LED edge-lit display, and a stylish ribbon plate stand. Powered by webOS, it offers seamless streaming and smart connectivity for the modern home.
A**P
This TV is Exceptional value for money!
This TV is exceptional value for money. This TV is for a second bedroom, and I did not want to pay through the roof for it. I have done so much research over the past month, and changed my mind numerous times, totally conflicted, as i am very loyal to Samsung. In the living room i have a 40in Samsung UE40C8000, and that was purchased in 2010, and the screen is phenomenal, still now.However not expecting it to be wow-wow, as i have read all the reviews and it is a mix bag much more positive then negative, but those negative comments not matter how little puts a seed of doubt in your head, and it is natural, like we all do is question yourself, whether it is the right thing to do.I decided to plunge for it, and I am thankful i did.Lets start with the screen, i predominantly watch Sports and Movies, and I categorically state you to not get any motion blur on the picture what so ever (when a ball is shooting through the ground), you do with other LED's.I have both Sky and an Android box attached to it, and the 4k Upscaler is just amazing, it really does make a difference, to both SD and HD picture. The contrast between coulors are really good. If you want to know how to calibrate the screen follow the instructions below.[...]The menus and LG apps are a breeze to navigate around, and setting up is easy. One function I love, and maybe it is me but when watching movies, I don't like it when the Aspect ratio is set to 16:9, and it does not fit the whole screen, so then you have to use the TV's in built setting to scroll through to get the right aspect ratio to fit the screen. However with this TV there is one quick setting called "Fit to screen", and hey presto the picture fits the screen.The 4k picture is really excellent, I tested using some YouTube videos, shame there is not much content out there at moment.The stand takes a pit of patients to put together, but looks nice.The best compliment I can give this TV, is that I am finding myself watching TV upstairs on this.more than downstairs. I am really debating weather to switch the TV in the Living Room for this.Remember if you are picture connoisseur, you may find some minor faults here and there, but in a nutshell this TV is only £400. if you want drop dead amazing picture then invest in an OLED, however I am critiquing on what i paid, and what I paid for in my opinion, is worth a lot more, for the quality and functionality you get with this TV.
D**E
Still going strong
This has been a fantastic purchase and is still going strong after 9 years . Cant fault it at all as we have never had a single issue with it .Excellent picture quality too .
C**R
Excellent smart TV, just missing ITV Player and 4oD apps to make it perfect.
I am very pleased with this TV but have given it 4 stars rather than 5 for three reasons: 1) there is no ITV Player app; 2) there is no 4oD app; 3) the Netflix app stopped working after a few weeks (I managed to get it working again by changing the DNS server setting in the TV to use a specific DNS server in the USA, although that provides the US Netflix service rather than the UK Netflix service and there are some differences in content, such as UK TV shows). To be fair, the Netflix problem is probably not LG's fault: the Web is littered with posts by owners of smart TVs from various manufacturers that suffer from the same problem.To get around the lack of an ITV Player app and a 4oD app I connect my laptop to the TV via an HDMI cable and use the players in a browser on the laptop. But apps on the TV itself would be much more convenient. The BBC iPlayer app is a real boon, and I have never watched so much catch-up TV.Apart from those three grumbles, the TV is excellent. The initial set-up of the TV after taking it out of the box was an absolute doddle. There are quite a few apps (free and non-free) which you can install from the remote LG Content Store accessible via the TV menu. Apart from Netflix, there are apps from other media providers such as Now TV, Amazon, Google Play Movies & TV, blinkbox, Spotify, etc. etc. Web browsing works quite well too (the browser is a version of the Google Chrome browser, although it does not support Flash or Silverlight). WebOS 2.0 is straightforward to use, and the remote is nifty once you get the hang of it. The remote's cursor is a handy way to navigate and select functions on the TV. There are several ports on the back of the TV, including three HDMI ports and three USB ports (at least one of them is USB 3.0). I connected an external USB hard drive Samsung M3 1TB USB 3.0 Slimline Portable Hard Drive - Black so that the TV can record programmes and also pause and replay live TV (handy if you need to go to the kitchen to make a cup of tea, or pop to the loo). I also copy videos and photos from my smartphone to the hard drive so that I can view them on the TV. The HD videos (MK4 files) I filmed with my smartphone on holiday a couple of years ago have never looked so good; for the first time I was able to view them in all their glory on a big screen. I have also put a couple of full-length AVI and MKV HD films on the hard drive, and these play beautifully on the TV.There is also a PCMCIA slot on the back next to the USB and HDMI ports, but I have not tried using that yet as the TV already has all the ports I need (I do have a few old PCMCIA cards knocking around in a drawer).The LG YouTube app is another app I use frequently. There is a lot of good content on YouTube these days, quite a bit of it in HD, and these videos look very good on the TV. In fact, even some of the lower-resolution YouTube videos look reasonable on the TV's 40-inch screen because the TV's software up-scales lower-resolution video.Although I have not had the TV long, it has downloaded several software upgrades from LG via the Internet. The TV can be configured to perform upgrades automatically or to ask you first. I chose the latter option. Anyway, I find it comforting to know that bug fixes and improvements to the TV's firmware and apps are being made by the manufacturer.Thus far I have used Freeview via a TV aerial, catch-up TV programmes via the BBC iPlayer app, films from a connected DVD player, films via the Netflix app, videos via the YouTube app, Web pages using the Web browser app, films and pictures via the external hard drive, and films and TV programmes from connected laptops. I have not bothered to connect the TV to a satellite service or to media devices such as smartphones, although these things are possible. It is also possible to connect devices to the TV using WiFi Direct. Although it is possible to connect the TV to your home network using WiFi or Ethernet cable, as you choose, I am just using WiFi with a BT Infinity broadband router and modem (only about 20 to 30 Mbps in my area, unfortunately), and it works fine. The BBC iPlayer app on the TV still performs perfectly, and I have used BBC iPlayer many times since buying the TV. Watching iPlayer in HD on a 40-inch screen is a treat.Picture quality is excellent in all modes of operation, including live TV, especially if I select the HD channels for BBC and ITV, although picture quality is very good even if I select the normal BBC and ITV channels. Films from my DVD player look excellent on the TV, and I like the way the TV automatically switches to the DVD player when I insert a DVD.The TV has more features than I have used so far, and it is very configurable. So far I have not felt the need to tinker with any of the myriad of settings, as the out-of-the-box experience looks very good to my eyes.Some people have commented that audio quality is not very good from the built-in speakers. In my medium-sized living room it is fine for my family, and the quality is good to my ears, although I do have to turn it up. But I can understand why some people would want to connect external speakers.If LG would add an app for ITV Player and 4oD, I would give this TV 5 stars without hesitation.Update on Netflix problem: Apparently the problem is due to BT, if BT is your ISP. There are several articles on Web about this, and it was also reported in at least one national newspaper in February 2016. In the end I managed to get access to UK Netflix by replacing the Home Hub 3 with a Home Hub 5 bought via Amazon UK.
T**S
Great TV for a Great Price
I picked up this 40" TV in November 2015 for £429.00 from Amazon EU S.a.r.L. Bought to replace a 10 year old 37" LCD which has seen better days due to age, burn-in and many toddler attacks. TV technology has moved on dramatically in 10 years. The difference between 1080i/720p LCD and 4K LED is remarkable, the colour depth is amazing, incredibly black blacks and very accurate colours. It handles my sources extremely well. BluRay/DVD over HDMI, PS3 over HDMI, Android Streaming Box over HDMI and PS2 over Component (5 cables). The upscaling is ridiculously good, 576i/50Hz Ps2 looks amazing, and it handles all three 1080p HDMI sources fantastically. The picture is crystal clear, with 4K YouTube feeds looking like nothing I've ever seen on a TV screen, absolutely clean and superbly detailed. There is very little lag in the UI (User Interface Menus etc.) and the PVR works really well. I have a 64Gb USB2 memory stick plugged into one of the three USB sockets for the PVR and it works really well. It will record programmes on stand-by. The TV also looks great, with a very small border around the actual screen, and it doesn't weigh anywhere near as much as the 10 year old TV it replaced. A great TV for a great price. The price seems to have jumped up to £520 since I bought this, but even at that price this is a good value high quality TV.
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