That puts it in contention with TCL’s 6-Series 4K HDR screens which offer 96 zones on the 55-inch TCL 55R617 and 120 zones on the 65-inch 65R617. Inside the TV, you’ll find a full array panel with 100 dimming zones. Spin the screen around to the back and you’ll find five HDMI ports (four of which are HDMI 2.0 with HDCP 2.2 support and one is HDMI 1.p/120Hz video), which hang out alongside component/composite video input, stereo analog audio, optical digital audio, Ethernet and one USB 2.0 port that could power a streaming stick of your choosing. With the stand attached, the screen sits at 57.01 x 35.14 x 11.81 inches (1448.1 x 892.6 x 300.0mm, L x H x D) but is only around 2.72 inches thick should you decide to wall-mount it. It has a thin, nearly non-existent bezel on three sides of the screen, while one silver trim underscores the screen and hides the IR receiver. That being said, despite its more traditional design, the Vizio still looks darn good. Not only does this help hide cords better, but it’s also centrally located and therefore doesn’t require such a wide table like more traditional TV legs do. The t-stand, which appears on every QLED TV model in Samsung’s range, neatly tucks power and HDMI cords away inside rather than let them dangle behind the screen. While Samsung’s entry-level QLED and Vizio’s P-Series are neck-and-neck in terms of picture performance, Samsung still has the lead in terms of overall design – due to the former’s use of a tidy t-shaped stand instead of the traditional v-shaped legs.
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