About this item:
Our brightest and widest range of colors and hues, powered by the intelligent Cognitive Processor XR™. With a QD-OLED screen enhanced by XR Triluminos Max, experience picture quality with as much as 200% brightness of its predecessor. Individually lit pixels produce pure black, so your favorite movies, shows, and games burst to life on screen with extraordinary detail and depth.
5.0 out of 5
100.00% of customers are satisfied
5.0 out of 5 stars For a smart company, Sony sure does some weird things with their TVs sometimes
(function(){ P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function'){ A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })() The picture quality of this TV is undisputedly stunning. I can sit slack-jawed in front of it and stare at almost any 4k content for hours and marvel at how gorgeous the picture is. But in other ways, Sony does some things in a very weird way that defy your expectations of how a smart company designs smart TVs.On almost every TV these days, there's a USB-2 port that is most often used to power a rear bias lighting strip that enhances viewing and reduces eyestrain. This TV has one too - but when you turn the TV off, power to that port will spring back to life, on and off, just for a few seconds, for several minutes after the TV is off. Then, hours later it will come on for a minute or so, then just an inexplicably go off. Why?? Why can't the USB port simply be powered off when the TV turns off like every other manufacturer's TV does? TCL TVs can set the timeout for USB power, and when it's off it's truly off and doesn't spring to life in the middle of the night. This appears to be a common problem amongst all Sony TVs. How difficult can this be to get right on a $3k device? (Answer - not at all difficult).Similarly with the LED power indicator on the front - it's on whenever the TV is plugged in, whether it's on or not. The LED is always there, and on. Other TVs have options to deal with this, but not this one. I covered it up as I am already quite aware whether or not there is power to my house.The back panel for the signal connections is located at the very bottom left of the TV, meaning that there is no room for cables to exit the back without being seen under the bottom edge when using the legs. When wall mounted, there is no easy channel to get HDMI/ethernet/etc cables into a wall or down a cable channel without a lot of serious 90 degree bending. Someone in the design department simply wasn't thinking about how to deal with the real world plethora of cables that have to come out of this thing. (The Sony HT-A7000 soundbar also has this problem, with HDMI cables exiting the back at different angles and locations, making a neat installation more difficult than it needs to be.) In addition, the huge size of the detachable panel cover makes it difficult to attach rear bias lighting LED strip to the outside back edge all around that lower corner.The power cable is not detachable, meaning you have to use an extension cord if it's not long enough. This is just weird - why not provide a standard AC jack like every other TV and let us use a power cord that works in our location instead of assuming that the 5 feet you gave us will always be perfect? Who thought this was a good idea?The Bravia camera on top is an ugly wart that serves no real purpose after setup. Mine is back in the box, and the TV looks much nicer without it. Maybe you need it for Zoom but not me. It looks expensive - can I get back the money I spent on it? No?(About Google TV OS, the less said the better. Disdain it, and get yourself an Apple ATV4K+ box. You will be a MUCH happier streamer. It's night-and-day easier to use, and you aren't constantly being pushed into the Google-sphere. I am not at all an Apple fanboi but the design and UI of this streaming device is far more sophisticated and operationally smooth than either a Google or Roku.)Kudos to Sony for a box design that allows for attaching the legs before completely removing the support styrofoam underneath, meaning you don't ever have to lay the panel down flat on its face or have someone hold the weight of it while you attach the legs. This makes it a lot easier to deal with a giant expensive device. Even if I'm going to mount a TV on the wall, as I will with this one, I always start out with it on the legs. This makes it easier to do initial testing, figure out where the VESA mount goes, how the cable routing will work, etc.The remote is made of aluminum, feels solid, and has an accelerometer that turns on the backlighting when you pick it up. This is very suave. The size of the remote is also smaller than previous Sony remotes which were uselessly too big. This is appreciated.There was a lot of apparent effort put into making the back of the TV appear with a consistent pattern across the entire back - little textured one inch squares. The detachable panel covers all line up and when everything is in place its a very consistent look. But it's totally useless - who looks at the back of their TV, ever? I don't care how beautiful or ugly the back panels are. Nobody cares. I'd rather it was an inconsistent mish-mash of ugly plastic thingies, if only the USB-2 port power would behave correctly and the cables were easier to route.Overall, this TV is certainly a major win. I'm very very happy so far, but there are just these little annoyances that would cost Sony nothing to deal with properly that make me wonder about how (or if) they think the consumer will be using it out here in the real world where very little resembles a Sony testing lab.
5.0 out of 5 stars Best TV ever created
This is the greatest TV i have ever owned. The picture is perfect. And the functionality and apps are crisp. I thought i would hate the google tv interface but it is so smooth. I also dont agree with having TV's shipped but the experince was seamless. Buy it. BUY IT NOW!!!!!
5.0 out of 5 stars Best TV picture I have ever seen.
This TV replaces an older 60" plasma TV. The new TV is a 65" OLED with boosted brightness. The color is fantastic. It blows my old plasma TV away. I have never seen reds, oranges, yellows, greens and blues so vibrant before. You can also see subtle color differences between objects. Red on red doesn't blur into the larger object. It may be because I went from 1080p to 4k or because this TV can produce more colors. Whatever it is it just looks great. I have not seen any digital artifacts during fast motion. The only thing that I am not in love with is the operating system software. I have managed to get it stuck in an endless loop more than once. (Not sure if it is operator error or the operating system but the OS should not allow the user to do that.) I just changed the viewing source from antenna to an HDMI input source to get out of the loop. This TV is only a couple inches wider than my old 60" TV. This TV has a much narrower border around the screen. I did have to buy a vesa mount table stand because my table is not 5 feet wide. The included stand mounts at the extreme edges on the bottom of the TV. My table is only 30 inches wide and I did not want to buy new furniture. The new stand works great and the new TV fits perfectly in the same space as the old TV. The audio sounds good right from the screen. (This model uses the screen for speakers.) There is a noticeable delay in the video if you use an external audio video receiver for surround sound. Your AVR will need to be newer than my old Sony DE-885 so that you can program in an audio delay to get the lip sync corrected. I have to route all of my video devices into the TV first to let the TV sync the audio to the video. I then use the fiber optic output of the TV to send dolby digital audio to my AVR for surround sound 5.2.0. I will have to get a new AVR in the future. (My AVR doesn't have HDMI inputs so I can't use the eARC HDMI output from the TV yet.) Overall I love this TV. Now I have to buy newer 4k capable add-ons. All I have for now is a 4k joey with a Dish Network Hopper 3. There is not much 4k programming on Dish yet. Santa are you listening?
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
I bought this without any local models to see just based on the ratings and reviews from several sites. I'll start with my only complaint which is that the OS is seriously slow to the point I sometimes don't know if it registered that I sent a command. An external Roku or Chromecast, etc would probably fix that. This is the most beautiful TV. I can't stress enough how amazing the image is. Expensive? Yes. Do I have any regrets about about choosing it? Not in the slightest. It is so much more than I thought it would be.Quick update after having used this TV for a few days: the UI is garbage. It is extremely slow to respond, can't seem to remember what app you were using should you pause and walk away for a few minutes and is constantly showing you ads which shouldn't be a thing on a device that costs this much. That being said, this is still a top notch TV. I've never seen a picture so beautiful and the sound is pretty great IMHO as well. If you're even considering buying it, after using it, it's a no brainer to me. Just pick up a streaming device if your choice so you don't have to use their built in operating system.
Livré avec soin
(function(){ P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function'){ A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })() J'avais peur que la télé soit trimbaler dans un camion de livraison toute la journée avant de m'être livré, mais c'est un petit camion qui ne livre que des téléviseur qui est venue.Très satisfait
Really good picture quality and brightness
You can really tell the difference in the brightness and contrast of dark scenes, which appear clear and crisp on this TV
Incredible brightness and clarity
Both sound quality and picture quality are a significant step up. I had been waiting for the price to go down to purchase and have zero regrets.
All the reviews written about the Sony Bravia XR A95L so far are true.
I have owned an LG LCD TV for the last 6 years and I was prepared to buy its flagship OLED TV this time around because of the brand prices and reliability, and specially because of the premium price of the Sony Bravia XR A95L. The reason I did not buy the LG G3 is because LG, in its supreme stupidity, did not sell the G3 with a stand, only with a wall-mount. Hopefully, 5 to 10 years from now, if LG includes the stand in the box I will certainly consider buying its flagship TV.
Great TV!
Great overall rating, just expensive.
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BHD1967546
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Product origin: United States
Electrical items shipped from the US are by default considered to be 120v, unless stated otherwise in the product description. Contact Bolo support for voltage information of specific products. A step-up transformer is required to convert from 120v to 240v. All heating electrical items of 120v will be automatically cancelled.
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