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-   -   US to UK - quick TV question (https://britishexpats.com/forum/moving-back-uk-61/us-uk-quick-tv-question-904746/)

ukmancoll Oct 18th 2017 1:33 pm

US to UK - quick TV question
 
My daughter threw a remote by accident at my 55" curved Samsung TV and destroyed it. Apparently its cheaper to buy a new one than to fix.

We're moving back to the UK next month. I think I probably know the answer, but what do you guys recommend I do about a replacement? Buy a new one here and put it in the container back to England (which is what we were going to do with the existing TV)? Or wait until we get back to the UK to buy a new one.

My guess is it comes down to price, and the issue of having a UK tv using UK power as opposed to US tv needing a power converter.

Thanks all.

BritInParis Oct 18th 2017 2:58 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
If it's already broken then wait until you get back to buy a new one. Avoid transformers and incompatible signal/app issues. John Lewis or Richer Sounds have good customer service, will price match and give you a 5-6 year warranty to boot.

Richard8655 Oct 18th 2017 2:58 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
Not only voltage differences (240 vs 110), the need for an outlet adapter, power transformer, but most importantly different broadcast standards. By far better to buy a new TV there. Even if it wasn’t broken I wouldn’t take it there for these reasons.

(Ah yes, Schaumburg. Just a few miles from my suburb!)

mrken30 Oct 18th 2017 6:01 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
UK TV's have much better program guides built-in. Unless you are just going to watch netflix, I would probably buy a UK TV. Cord cutting in the UK is much easier because of the TV license and good OTA TV.

ukmancoll Oct 18th 2017 6:11 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
Thanks all.

What are thoughts on pricing? Is it comparable?

Pulaski Oct 18th 2017 6:12 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
TVS are invariably multi-voltage, and accept both 50Hz and 60Hz mains these days, so there will be no need for any sort of transformer or adapter - just switch the plug or cord to a British 13A plug.

That said, I agree with everyone else - buy in the UK when you get back.

ukmancoll Oct 18th 2017 6:21 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by Pulaski (Post 12364022)
TVS are invariably multi-voltage, and accept both 50Hz and 60Hz mains these days, so there will be no need for any sort if transformer or adapter - just switch the plug or cord.

That said, I agree with everyone else - buy in the UK when you get back.

That's what I was thinking... based on my research. I think it comes down to price? The same model that is $799 here is £899 in the UK.

Pulaski Oct 18th 2017 6:28 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by ukmancoll (Post 12364029)
That's what I was thinking... based on my research. I think it comes down to price? The same model that is $799 here is £899 in the UK.

At those prices, and given the exchange rate, I'd take the British one every time because of the risk of damage in transit and that a US product warranty will be worthless in the UK.

mrken30 Oct 18th 2017 6:37 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by ukmancoll (Post 12364029)
That's what I was thinking... based on my research. I think it comes down to price? The same model that is $799 here is £899 in the UK.

Not sure what model you have, but if it's down to price

Samsung UE55M6300 55" Curved 1080p Full HD LED TV UE55M6300AKXXU is £680.
or
Samsung UE55MU6220 55" 4K Ultra HD Curved LED Smart TV with Freeview HD UE55MU6220KXXU is £770


if you take your US TV you will probably want to buy a freeview box. So there is not that much difference in price and you will lose UK specific features unless you can flash your TV with UK software.

ukmancoll Oct 18th 2017 6:46 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by mrken30 (Post 12364054)
Not sure what model you have, but if it's down to price

Samsung UE55M6300 55" Curved 1080p Full HD LED TV UE55M6300AKXXU is £680.
or
Samsung UE55MU6220 55" 4K Ultra HD Curved LED Smart TV with Freeview HD UE55MU6220KXXU is £770


if you take your US TV you will probably want to buy a freeview box. So there is not that much difference in price and you will lose UK specific features unless you can flash your TV with UK software.

I was looking at the 6500 - that's what I have now (or did..) I'll probably have to downgrade if I want to stay in budget and get one from UK.

mrken30 Oct 18th 2017 7:00 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by ukmancoll (Post 12364064)
I was looking at the 6500 - that's what I have now (or did..) I'll probably have to downgrade if I want to stay in budget and get one from UK.

Samsung UE55MU6500 55" 4K Ultra HD HDR Curved LED Smart TV with Freeview HD and Active Crystal Colour UE55MU6500UXXU is £800, so just a little bit more.

And that's without shopping around too much or taking advantage of promocodes etc.

or get a unknown brand , not my choice, for less money

electriQ 65" Curved 4K Ultra HD LED Smart TV with Google Android and Freeview HD eiq-CV65UHDT2SM is £730

UK houses might be a bit small for a TV that size.

ukmancoll Oct 18th 2017 10:22 pm

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by mrken30 (Post 12364073)
Samsung UE55MU6500 55" 4K Ultra HD HDR Curved LED Smart TV with Freeview HD and Active Crystal Colour UE55MU6500UXXU is £800, so just a little bit more.

And that's without shopping around too much or taking advantage of promocodes etc.

or get a unknown brand , not my choice, for less money

electriQ 65" Curved 4K Ultra HD LED Smart TV with Google Android and Freeview HD eiq-CV65UHDT2SM is £730

UK houses might be a bit small for a TV that size.

So my TV will look even bigger than it actually is....!
:thumbup:

Richard8655 Oct 19th 2017 1:47 am

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 
That’s right. The latest HDTVs support international voltage and transmission standards. As mentioned, an outlet adapter just needed. Been out of touch in latest TV technology. But I’d still only own a TV purchased in the local country.

BritInParis Oct 19th 2017 8:32 am

Re: US to UK - quick TV question
 

Originally Posted by Pulaski (Post 12364022)
TVS are invariably multi-voltage, and accept both 50Hz and 60Hz mains these days, so there will be no need for any sort of transformer or adapter - just switch the plug or cord to a British 13A plug.

That said, I agree with everyone else - buy in the UK when you get back.


Originally Posted by Richard8655 (Post 12364236)
That’s right. The latest HDTVs support international voltage and transmission standards. As mentioned, an outlet adapter just needed. Been out of touch in latest TV technology. But I’d still only own a TV purchased in the local country.

I would be cautious in that regard. For the television under discussion, the official UK specs state that it only supports "AC220-240V 50/60Hz". The US specs don't mention voltage at all.


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