LG vs. Sony 65” OLED


I’m moving and about to buy one of these TVs in the $1300 range and wondering if either is strongly favored for any reasons?  Sounds like the LG might be brighter/better for HDR but Sony may have better blacks/color and may be a little smoother/more film like with better upsampling and possibly better sound (I’ll be using my HT speakers for movies so not a huge deal there) but I dunno.  I won’t have an overly bright room (although glare could possibly be an issue so that could be important if one is better there) nor will I be doing much gaming so this is mainly for TV/movies, which kinda points me marginally to the Sony but love to hear thoughts.  My other main concern is reliability where both seem good but LG seems to have the edge there, which is not a small thing. 

Also, I’ll be using the Ethernet connection from my router (that I’m buying separately rather than renting the crap from the cable company) instead of Wi-Fi so if anyone has found an Ethernet cable that’s made a significant improvement in the <$200 price range I’d be very interested in that as well.  Thanks!

soix

I have a Panasonic 60 inch plasma TV.   I’m still waiting for the next best thing or that it breaks

@sextantcv4  My buddy had the last 60” Panny Plasma and about a year ago got a Sony Bravia 7 microLED TV and thinks it is much better all around.  I was curious how it compares to the similarly-priced Sony OLED Bravia 8 I just bought and saw this review that I found very interesting in comparing the two technologies and their relative strengths and differences.  Anyway, just thought I’d mention it as he had a similar TV to you and found the Bravia 8 to be a significant upgrade, and he loved his Panny Plasma (he’s a very knowledgeable and critical videophile BTW) so he doesn’t say this lightly.  FWIW.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-taz8Ur_j_I

@soix  thank you for posting the video!  Looks like I should definitely keep in mind the micro LED option 

@stereosanctity Sony TV sets of old……

Yes l agree with your assessment of the Sony (Bravia?) processing. Years ago it was right up there with Panasonic Viera sets from memory. In fact the Bravia processor was amongst the quickest on some TVs and were favoured by gamers for the quick refresh rates. The set up menus are brilliant and the TVs work best when most of the settings “in settings” are actually set to off. Talking to TV engineers this is the broad concensous with all TVs, the more processing you can eliminate the purer the picture. The Sony Bravia motion processing in most cases does not even have to be set to “high” for optimal performance. Take my advice, turn off as many of the settings as possible that have been preset by ANY manufacturer. The set you have just purchased has probably been optimised for the retailers showroom which under bright ambient lighting is just the opposite to your living space.

l have had 3 Sony TVs over the last 20 years and still have two (one over 15 years old slumbering in a bedroom). I had originally bought an LG 32” for that bedroom but it went gizzzzzz with the sound one day, like a siren going off that you couldn’t stop without pulling the plug. Richer Sounds exchanged the set instantly. It was a common fault apparently. When l fine tuned and adjusted the TV back lighting for mainly in the dark viewing, it developed another fault. During dark background titles at the end of films when there were not “many bright titles” the TV would shut down, turn itself off… not detecting a picture. So that one went back to exchange. A year later l sold it half price to my sister. In short order it developed another fault on a part of the set l never used… the headphone socket she used to feed her sound system. It went back for repair under warranty and a month after the warranty finished the sound went completely.

So that’s pretty much underlined my opinion on LG. I will never buy one ever again. All of the Sony TVs l have owned never caused concern. lt amazes my son that l am still using a 12 year old (not a 4K) set in my cinema room with “an old” Cambridge Audio Universal 752BD. 
 

l will say it again …. Turn as many menu settings to “off” as you can!

@mylogic Yes!  It’s a must to turn off all that nonsense you mentioned. It’s the equivalent of listening to a Best Buy stereo with a large V curve so it sounds the deepest and loudest on the showroom floor. 

@stereosanctity ” Yes …. turn off all that nonsense….”

We are on the same page due to experience. Needless to say, turning off “all that nonsense” also applies to DVD and Blu-ray players…… Optimise, optimise costs nothing.

l wonder how many people actually never bother to do anything to improve their expensive buys…. A non-brainer. Why accept what someone else thinks you should see?