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VIZIO 50-inch Quantum Pro 4K 120Hz QLED HDR10+ Smart TV with Dolby Vision, Active Full Array, 240Hz @ 1080p PC Gaming, WiFi 6E, Apple AirPlay, Chromecast Built-in, M50QXM-K01,…
10 203 040 506 071 000 CFA
Rated 4.00 out of 5 based on 4 customer ratings
(4 customer reviews)
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Warranty 6 months
Description
- With VIZIO Account, access VIZIO OS with apps built right in, manage your app subscriptions, watch free channels, and much more. A VIZIO Account is required for Smart TV functionality and product updates.
- Over 1 billion colors enhanced with Quantum Color QLED. Deep contrast and high peak brightness are achieved with Active Full Array Backlight + local dimming, enhanced with Dolby Vision HDR, and fine-tuned with Active Pixel Tuning
- Watch every scene flood with exceptional brightness and deeper darks with up to 1,000 nits peak brightness and full array local dimming.
- Experience truly immersive gameplay with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro certification. When connected to a console or PC, utilize up to 120fps in 4K or 240fps in 1080p
- Built-in VIZIO OS lets you instantly access all your favorite apps and more. Enjoy hundreds of free channels and thousands of free On Demand titles with the built-in WatchFree+ app
Customer Reviews
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Rated 4 out of 5
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4 reviews for VIZIO 50-inch Quantum Pro 4K 120Hz QLED HDR10+ Smart TV with Dolby Vision, Active Full Array, 240Hz @ 1080p PC Gaming, WiFi 6E, Apple AirPlay, Chromecast Built-in, M50QXM-K01,…
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Mouse
Kevin M. Kilbride –
Almost infinitely “tweakable.”
I use this strictly as a glorified computer monitor, and it does an absolutely 𝑠𝑡𝑒𝑙𝑙𝑎𝑟 job at that. I don’t have it connected to broadcast or cable sources (as if! 😂) and don’t even let it connect to the Internet (take that, Google 😏). But I do occasionally watch HBO or Prime via my computer’s web browser.
From the factory, the monitor was not very impressive. It was obviously adjusted for minimum latency, not image quality. [I should note that I pre-ordered the monitor, so I got one of the first units available; later units may have different image defaults.] Tonal scale was somewhat truncated, with washed out highlights and slightly crushed blacks. BUT…unlike other televisions (and even monitors) I’ve tried or seen, this Vizio sports a veritable smörgåsbord of image adjustments, allowing you to tune the result to perfection.
Thank heavens. 😮💨
With about an hour of iterative adjustment and mode-switching, I had the image looking just mah-velous 😎 While the peak brightness of my Samsung “television” may be retina-melting, I actually don’t like monitors to be adjusted like that—after about an hour, it’s just too hard on the brain. Fortunately, this Vizio has very good zoned backlighting, so you can dial down the peak brightness and still maintain good contrast. Not nearly as epic as OLED, of course, but I should note that when the screen goes black, from any source, it truly does go 𝑏𝑙𝑎𝑐𝑘. As in, all the backlights turn 𝑜𝑓𝑓, and if you are in an otherwise completely unlit room, you will not be able to see. This is in contrast to many other monitors—even those that claim to have modulated zoned backlighting—where a “black” screen will still produce more than enough light to navigate your way out of a room. 🌚 Not this beast. 🙂
In the “con” column is…the remote (ever cursed be thy name). The power button is 𝑟𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑡 𝑛𝑒𝑥𝑡 𝑡𝑜 the “sponsorship buttons” (Disney, Netflix, Prime, etc.)—so close that it is tricky to avoid hitting the Amazon Prime button instead of the power button (if that was an intentional ploy by Mr. Bezos, he should give a raise to whomever closed that deal). Also, the volume rocker is close to the bottom of the remote, where it is difficult to reach. They must have exhausted their engineering budget qualifying this puppy for image gymnastics; did they not have anything left to design a usable remote? 🤨 At least it’s RF instead of IR, and therefore is completely insensitive to orientation with the monitor.
After living with it for a few months, I’m ready to say that this is one of the few pre-orders I’m actually happy with. If Kickstarter of yore ever produced anything half as good as this, I’d be ecstatic. 😑
Recommended…if you’re patient. Not recommended, if you expect your televisions to come from the factory “pre-calibrated” 😵💫
Max –
UPDATE: After exactly 1 year, the optical output on the TV broke. Now I am stuck using the TV’s built-in speakers because there is also no analog audio output on this TV. Combined with the issues listed below, I can confidently say avoid this TV.
I settled on this TV after a long and frustrating search – Most QLED panels are VA type, which gives inky black contrast that, when combined with full array local dimming, gives OLED panels a run for their money in HDR, but sacrifices viewing angle. For my application however, the viewing angle was important, and OLED was out of my price range, so I needed an IPS panel, which has better off-center picture quality but can’t really make black pixels black, they end up looking gray. And I wanted a TV with quantum dots for the vibrant color and brightness. I figured that modern local dimming tech, where the backlight dims in darker areas of the image to allow black pixels to be darker and improve the dynamic range of the display (HDR), would be good enough for my application. It wouldn’t rival an OLED, but it would be an improvement on past TV’s without this tech and negate the disadvantages of IPS, or so I thought…
The only 75” panels I could find with IPS and QLED at first were a series of TV’s by LG. The LG TV’s were a little lower in price than this Vizio, but they used edge-lit displays, which can’t really do local dimming because they do not have the ability to turn down the backlight behind specific parts of the image. After a lot of searching, I came across this product, which I was thrilled to find was QLED, IPS, and full array local dimming. It wasn’t well loved by tech reviewers, seemingly mostly due to software, and underwhelming HDR performance compared to the VA-panel equipped competition. The poor ratings of dynamic range were all done with the local dimming turned off, which is no surprise as IPS panels can’t make pixels fully dark. But I figured that was an unfair measure and the dynamic range would be greatly helped by the full array local dimming. I figured this was the only option that met my criteria.
When I first set up the TV, I was extremely disappointed in the picture quality. There was simultaneously a lack of detail in the highlights and the shadows, and really inconsistent picture quality across a variety of content sources. I went into the settings to see what I could do to adjust the picture.
Turns out the culprit is extremely poor software calibration for the local dimming HDR feature. High, Medium, or Low local dimming all created an over processed image that looks almost like when you convert a video file through multiple formats, as well as deeply unconvincing HDR. But when you disable the local dimming feature, VOILA! The picture quality became excellent. Even watching HDR demo videos isn’t too disappointing, because while the blacks aren’t that black, the screen gets very bright in the bright parts.
It is worth noting that to execute local dimming HDR, the TV has to know precisely where the lighting zones start and end, must intelligently adjust the backlight brightness of each zone, and adjust the “brightness” of the pixels in that zone to account for an inconsistent amount of light being pushed through them. This takes sophisticated software calibration to achieve, but once you do it, it’s free to copy it to every TV you make.
It is extremely disappointing that this TV has the hardware I want but the software calibration of the HDR feature is SO atrocious it is COMPLETELY UNUSABLE. I’m left thinking that they just copied software from a VA panel calibration and gave an intern half a week to fiddle with variables. This TV has the hardware I was looking for but because they couldn’t be bothered to do the software right, I may as well have dropped my local dimming requirement and bought an LG panel with edge lighting for less money.
That said, for a non-HDR IPS QLED, the image quality is very good. The complaints about the usability of the smart features are overblown, it’s not any worse than any other mainstream smart TV software – considerably better than Samsung’s – and the remote control is actually quite nice to use. Plus, I notice that the reflections on the screen are much less clear/bright than they are on my other (LG) TV so perhaps its worth the extra money over the LG IPS panel just for that superior reflection handling. In any case, I’m not going to return it. It’s going to serve my needs just fine.
But I’m warning you: There is no good picture quality on this TV unless you DISABLE one of its HEADLINE FEATURES: full array local dimming. And the only reason for that is bad software calibration. Try harder, Vizio; and if getting full array local dimming to work properly on an IPS display actually is impossible, then why build this panel?
billy pawlowski –
Very nice TV ,great picture, color and the audio is above average. You could get away without adding a sound bar but add one and you got a very nice set up . Solid bang for buck score. Easy to use and has alot of features.
Lee Michael Larson –
This is a fantastic tv. I use it for streaming. I have it connected to my pc. And i couldn’t be more happier with the picture. But the main reason i bought it was for gaming. And i’m in awe of the capabilities of delivering a 4k resolution with VRR just makes the games flow like butter. If you have a PS5 or a xbox seires x buy this tv. It was the only one i could find with 4k @ a native 120hz under 500 bucks. Makes it a steal.