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Philips 65OLED805

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Philips 65OLED805
Screen:65 ", 3840x2160 px, 100/120 Hz
Picture:4K upscaling, HDR
Multimedia:T2 tuner, Android TV, Wi-Fi, LAN, Subwoofer
Controls:voice, assistant
Three-sided Ambilight. P5 AI Perfect Picture Processor. Wide Color Gamut reproduces 99% of DCI-P3 shades. Excellent OLED panel with accurate color reproduction. High index of dynamic scenes. Large reserve of brightness.
All specifications
Specifications 65OLED805
Colour
Size65 "
Operating systemAndroid TV
CPUPhilips P5 Perfect Picture
Display
MatrixOLED
Screen surfaceanti-glare
Resolution3840x2160 px
Upscalingup to 4K
Frame rate100/120 Hz
Colour gamut DCI-P399 %
HDR supportHDR10+, Dolby Vision
Multimedia
Sound power50 W
Number of speakers2
Subwoofer
Audio decodersDolby Atmos, DTS
Digital tunerDVB-T2 (terrestrial)
DVB-C (cable)
DVB-S (satellite)
DVB-S2 (satellite)
Features
FeaturesWi-Fi 5 (802.11ac)
Miracast
Google Cast (Chromecast)
Bluetooth v 4.2
Ambilight
voice control
Amazon Alexa
Google Assistant
Connectors
HDMI4
HDMI versionv 2.0
Additional inputsUSB
LAN
Outputsmini-Jack (3.5 mm) headphones
optical
General
Built-in memory16 GB
Wall mountVESA 300x300 mm
Power consumption187 W
Energy efficiency classB
Dimensions (WxHxD)1449x846x261 mm / with stand /
Dimensions without stand (WxHxD)1449x830x58 mm
Weight25.4 kg / with stand /
Added to E-CatalogJuly 2020
The information in the model description is for reference purposes.
Always clarify the specifications and configuration of the product with the online store manager before purchasing.
Catalog Philips 2026 - new arrivals, bestsellers, and the most relevant models Philips.
I haven't lost hope and everything will be okay )))
17 January 2021 
Less than a month went by. Bought it on December 10, and by January 6 it needed repairs. What can I say? I took great care of it. Set up the timer so it would turn off automatically when idle. It has a function to clear static images, and I used it every day. Honestly, I was more attentive to it than necessary. On January 6, it was working normally on TV, I stepped out of the room for about half an hour, and when I returned, my heart almost stopped! A black screen with vertical stripes. It didn't respond to the remote. I unplugged it and plugged it back in—again those stripes, a flash, and the screen went black. Took it to the service for a matrix replacement. But two or three weeks before that, I noticed that on a dark background where the stripes later appeared, there was one wide stripe darker than the rest. It wasn't visible on other colors, only on dark gray, like how black looks on LCD screens. Seems like they've acknowledged it at the service and said they'll replace the matrix. I'll be waiting for at least three weeks. Of course, after a 65-inch screen, a 49-inch feels like watching on a phone!
Liked the picture quality. Speed of operation. During the time I've used it, it hasn't crashed even once. It read all video formats from the removable hard drive, and they were over 100GB. PS4 Pro in HDR 10+ is perfect, but the PS itself doesn't really support HDR. Everything was perfect, BUT THE DOWNSIDES BELOW!!!!!!!!
As I mentioned in my first review, the IR remote is terrible. You constantly have to point it at the TV, which is very frustrating. The second drawback: the built-in player is good, as I wrote before; it reads all the formats I tried, even very heavy ones. However, the fast forward feature is terrible. Previously, I could press left to rewind to where I needed or press right to fast forward. In this player, fast forwarding only works with increased speed; one press is 4x, the second time is 8x, and so on. In short, it's a hassle. You want to go back two seconds, but instead, it rewinds 30 seconds at best. The third downside: I bought myself wireless Bluetooth headphones, also from Philips. The first ones were Philips SHB4405, and before buying this TV, I got Philips TAUH202. The gist is, I paired them with the TV, but they keep disconnecting. I pair them again, but they disconnect. I can't understand why. Right now, I set up my previous Philips, and everything is fine. I don't have to do anything; I just press power on the headphones, and the sound automatically switches from speakers to headphones. I don't understand why. I already set up the TV speakers, then switch to headphones, and nothing. I have to delete the Bluetooth device and pair it again. This happens with two different Philips headphones.
Igor Aleksandrovichuse Philips 65OLED805 less than month
Well, I just started using it and will see what happens next.
11 December 2020 
Well, I bought myself a Philips 4K HDR 65OLED805, and here's what I can say after a couple of hours of setup and test videos. It plays all formats from the hard drive. I installed all the apps, including Video Box, and everything works. But there are a few issues. Occasionally, Twitch would freeze at 1080p60, and don't tell me the internet can't handle it—I'm on 5G with a speed of 500 Mbps. Channel switching takes forever on digital cable, like really long, even though the picture quality is fantastic. And the last BUT for now!!! Before purchasing, I read about it, watched videos, and even called up Philips customer service to bug them, but no one mentioned that the remote isn't Bluetooth, but infrared, infrared, Carl!!!! I never even considered that a remote like this could come with a TV of this price. Honestly, I'm just shocked. My previous 49pus7150 had Bluetooth, but here it's IR!!!! Deal with it.
Good picture, good and ample sound, Ambilight, although on such a diagonal, it may not be needed anymore.
How is it even possible to make an IR remote for it, HOW??? Who's working there??? Where have you ever seen an IR remote for such a TV??? Slow switching of digital television. There's no single button on the remote to bring up the channel guide information, at least two clicks are needed. Unlike the previous one where there was a dedicated "i" button, pressing it would show what program is on and when it ends.
Igor Aleksandrovichuse Philips 55OLED805 less than month
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Video reviews

Seriously improved Philips P5 image processor

Last year's flagship Philips OLED TVs were impressive in terms of brightness and detail. The second technological leap in 2 years is too much, so in 2020 the company's engineers focused on improving what is already there. Namely, the refinement of the Philips P5 processor, which is responsible for numerous software image enhancements, automatic brightness-contrast adjustment and other features that distinguish a top-end TV from just a good panel. Phillips says they trained the neural network on millions of different images and taught it much better to classify content on the screen (for example, nature, people, cars, etc.), adjusting the image based on the classification.

Dynamic Scene Index 5700 PPI

As with last year's OLED panels from the company, the TV really shines when you turn on HDR10+ or Dolby Vision. The image is very bright and colorful, the black colour is really black, and neighboring elements of the image can seriously contrast with each other. The index of dynamic scenes, which is achieved through Picture Performance Index technology, is also impressive. The image on the screen looks amazing, although without proper calibration it can go into acid shades. So we advise you to spend time adjusting the picture. Moreover, Phillips itself has equipped the TV with a “before and after” comparison mode, thanks to which you can evaluate the quality of processing and understand whether it has become better. In addition, there is a "director's mode", which disables any processing showing exactly the picture that the director intended. What's happening on the screen is emphasized by Ambilight's signature background lighting, which adjusts the colour of the external lighting on the wall to match what's happening on the screen.

Only 60Hz in 4K resolution

On other fronts, the Philips 65OLED805 doesn't surprise, but it doesn't disappoint either. 50-watt acoustics sound more interesting than a year ago, thanks to the changed direction of the speakers, the bass is more distinct and weighty. The only pity is that they did not add support for HDMI 2.1, which is why at 4K resolution the TV is not able to display a scan above 60 Hz. Plus, due to the amount of information being processed, the video signal output delay can reach 30ms or even higher, so playing dynamic games even at lower resolutions on 65OLED805 is not very comfortable.