This was posted 6 years 2 months 4 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

Related
  • expired

Panasonic TH-65EZ950U 65" OLED UHD Smart TV $3,295 C&C @ The Good Guys eBay

200
PRONTO

Great price for a 65" OLED.
Uses the full $300 discount available on this promo code.
Free Click n Collect if you live near a TGG store (try IE or Firefox if C&C not working in Chrome), or extra for delivery.

TV Technology: OLED
What's In The Box: Panasonic 65"(165cm) OLED UHD Smart TV, Remote Control
Width (mm): 1453
Additional Features: 4K PRO HDR Premium OLED, 4K Hexa Chroma Drive Pro, Studio Colour HCX2
Depth (mm): 280
Video Streaming Apps: Netflix, You Tube, Amazon Video, FreeviewPlus
Sound: 40W (10W x 2 and 10W x 2)
Screen Size: 65"
Screen Resolution: Ultra High Definition
Resolution (Pixels): 3,840 x 2,160
Smart TV: my Home Screen 2.0
Colour: 10-Bit Colour & Wide Colour Gamut
Warranty: 1 Year
Weight with stand (without stand): 24kg(23kg)
HDMI Input: 4
USB Input: 3

Original 10% off Sitewide with $75 Minimum Spend @ eBay Deal Post

Related Stores

eBay Australia
eBay Australia
Marketplace
The Good Guys
The Good Guys

closed Comments

  • +3

    Just an FYI for anyone wanting to pick up an OLED in their car, I tried to pick up my LG from the good guys in Frankston 6 weeks ago and they warned me about laying the TV down on its side in the car. They said they had lots of TV's returned with cracked screens. I thought they were talking shit until I saw how thin the OLED screens actually are and they do bow a bit if they get bounced around. I ended up just paying for delivery. Obviously not a problem if you can stand it up in your car.

    • Yes the screens are too thin now, seriously.

      What is wrong with making them more robust, they are all doing an Apple, form over function.

      • +1

        I agree with this - until the entire TV is as thin as the top half, what is the point of making the top half so fragile when it still has to stick out from the wall so far anyway.

        They should be moving all the smarts into a control box that sits down on the floor/entertainment unit, and just have the screen itself stuck to the wall, with a single cable (can be internal to wall via conduit as often done now) between box + screen.

        • Like this?

          It's cool, but i think the practical value is limited either partially or fully thin. I guess it feels like you're getting something more impressive for your money, but personally I don't mind something more robust (though it wouldn't sway me against this either).

        • @grizzle: yes like that, but they buggered it up by building the smarts into an expensive Soundbar.. people with a decent 5.1 up to 7.4.2 surround sound speaker system dont want a Soundbar.

          The Soundbar should be an optional extra, with the smarts in a self contained box.

      • +1

        It's thinner than my phone. It's mental. However it's a very nice TV and its going in a brand new house. Quite a show piece.

  • This TV is worth more than my car :)

  • I've been waiting for the LG OLED65C7T to hit about 3k but it's taking FOREVER. How does this compare to the LG?

    • +1

      The new high-end Panasonic Tvs are arguably superior to LG and Sony, and at least equal to (or better than) Samsung. Several reputable reviews of comparison tests from the UK and Canada confirm this.

      • "and at least equal to (or better than) Samsung"

        Samsung don't do OLED right?

        Any OLED will look better than Samsung at the moment? I've had a look a few times but side by side it seems QLED is just an advanced LCD/LED technology that is still inferior to OLED. Mind you this is my personal opinion.

        • +1

          When making this comparative statement I was referring to Panasonic's new high-end Tvs in general.

  • +1

    $3200 at costco

  • -1

    1 year warranty for a $3,295 TV…

    • +1

      Many of the big brands are 1 year… but in reality under the ACA you should be able to argue ~5 years warranty from the retailer.
      None of the 4 or 5 TVs Ive bought in the last 10 years have had any issues.. in fact I dont think Ive needed any TV repairs in the last 20+ years.

      • -1

        It is all good when everything works, but for those times that you need warranty that shouldn't be just 1 year. There are still people who don't know they could ask for it to be repaired even after the original warranty expired.

        You didn't have any issues, doesn't mean others haven't otherwise manufacturers could theoretically give 20 year warranty.

        Btw, you bought 4 or 5 TVs in the last 10 years. Does that mean you replaced them every 2-3 years? If so, then it is understandable you had no issues

        • Yup.. looking for an OLED TV now (considering this vs the LG), last TV was bought 3 years ago (Samsung 75"), but the one before that was only 1 year earlier (Sharp 70").

  • -1

    No dolby vision

  • -1

    Great price for a great TV but no dolby vision is a worry.

    • Honestly, i don't see any major difference between dolby vision and the regular hdr. They look the same to me. At least for a regular consumer.

      • -3

        Not everyone is blind mate

Login or Join to leave a comment