• out of stock

Blaupunkt 65" 4K UHD Frameless Android TV BP650USG9700 $374 + Delivery @ Catch

570

Cheap 65 inch
Great deal at this price.
4k
Chromecast built in.
Google assistant with voice control.
Android tv

This offer is not eligible for OnePass discounts or delivery caps. The product will be charged & posted individually.

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closed Comments

  • +2
  • -2

    seems doesn't have good review

  • Aldo a Soniq 65 inch tv avilabl for $447 plus delivery https://www.catch.com.au/product/soniq-65-a-series-uhd-andro…

  • +2

    Catch frenzy

    • Click Frenzy this Tuesday.

    • +1

      Wow. I think that's the first 85" I've seen for under $1k

  • +1

    Absolute banger of a deal, and not a bad TV for the price if you have an external sound system to go with it.

  • +1

    They do not deliver to wa. Error:

    Sorry, this item cannot be delivered to the selected postcode.

  • These are very slow processes this brand, constantly freezes

  • +1

    Bought this over 2 year ago and still going strong.

    Viewing angles not the best, load times are terrible and blacks are blocky.

    ….but paid almost twice this price back then.

    If you want 65" 4K UHD Frameless for the cheapest possible price I would recommend this.

    If you care about any other features at all stay far away from this TV

    • Im guessing it runs kayo very poorly?

      • +1

        Kayo always runs poorly on everything, even from one day to the next

        • Kayo runs flawlessly and smoothly on my LG 42" and on my NVIDIA Shield.

  • +7

    Stick a google tv or firestick on it and sorted re software.

  • +7

    You won't find a better 4K 65" TV for under $374.

  • +6

    I swear it feels like as the cost of living is getting more and more expensive (food, electricity, rent, etc), electronics and other luxury goods have starting falling lately.

    • +5

      Almost seems like interest rates rising/rent and inflation on essentials have impacted discretionary spending.

    • +3

      need to get a second job to pay the rent, but not to buy a TV

    • +2

      That's exactly how it is supposed to work. If the cost of living goes up demand for non essential luxury goods drops.

      With less demand manufacturers lower prices to keep sales up - their factories make less money, better than not selling anything at all.

      Additionally the price of TVs falling lowers the CPI figures printed by statistics agencies. The inflation in your cost of living is always going to be higher than official figures (which consider all goods, not only essential goods).

      If you are in the 30% of Australians without a mortgage, high inflation is making you relatively wealthier while everyone else gets poorer

      • +2

        Didnt know i was getting wealthier

        • If the things you want to buy are getting cheaper, are you not wealthier than before?

          • @greatlamp: Yes, but rent and groceries are getting expensive

            • -2

              @U30004: For someone who owns their own home outright there is no rent, so the impact of inflation on groceries is only small proportion of living expenses. Hence you are becoming RELATIVELY wealthier compared to people who are paying rent, or have a mortgage. This is 30% of Australians.

              • -1

                @greatlamp: I am paying rent and just been asked for $60 per week raise in rent.

                • @U30004: Thats more than likely the greedy real estates have put the price up not the actual owner.

                  • @Regie69: Seems like it. As soon as i reported a damp patch on the room.. 2 days later i got rent increase notice

                    • @U30004: Yep , mine went up $60.
                      Tried to negotiate and said no.
                      Now i report every small issue to get them to fix things that i would if done for free.

                      • @Regie69: Indeed. I too didnt report lot of small issues

                  • @Regie69: Pretty easy.. did your rent go up more than inflation? (they say 7%..but let's face it, it's more like 10%). Work off that and you will know if it's cost price or opportunity.

                    Remembering the property appreciating in value is a part of that inflation index (but is it beating inflation and appreciating, or is the value of money simply becoming less faster than its value is going up)? So its price might go up, but the property value might be worth less?

                    Now there is risk in buying property. What % value would you put on your own several hundred thousand dollars put into a box occupied by a stranger? Vs say a term deposit.

                    If rent follows inflation and a bit..it's about right.

                    As for getting 'them' to do everything,.if.you know you can get a better rental elesewhere…then why wouldn't you. But if you are in a competitive place and the landlord knows they can replace an annoying tenent easily…well…

                    How did we get here from a cheap TV?

                • @U30004: Ok. What does that have to do with what I said? Please read what I wrote if you want to discuss

                  • +1

                    @greatlamp: You're 100% correct. Most people just don't understand basic economic principles. For that 30% of Australian's whom are not negatively impacted by inflation, many can now invest in high return term deposits guaranteeing themselves 5%+ ROI. This increased income provides more discretionary spending money for primarily the retired Aussie's, and adds to the pain that the remaining two thirds of Australian's are currently enduring as it only draws out the length of time to return to an acceptable CPI level. For this group, making more money than before and on top of that, TV's like this are dropping in price, they really have no reason to complain, compared to the average subruban family of 5 now deciding whether to buy their kids a present for their birthday or make the next mortgage repayment to ensure a roof over their heads, but I can tell you which group is often the first to complain about the price of milk and bread increasing… economic psychology and the sociological ramifications are quite fascinating.

                  • -1

                    @greatlamp: Dont know.. does it matter

    • +1

      I have the TCL one for a yr, all good and no issue so far

      • Thank you for your feedback! I had a 58-inch Hisense TV that broke within four years, and the total usage time probably did not exceed two years.

        But I might give this TCL a try this time.

    • I would trust an actual brand like TCL over a whitelabel 'brand' that doesn't manufacture anything.

      The P series is also a midrange TV, not their cheapest line

      • Thank you for the opinion!

  • Damn. Doesn’t deliver to my area

  • Excludes WA

  • Now OOS

  • Any of the 'usuals' price match this?

  • "After the 2011 take-over, Blaupunkt became a managed brand name, with all production outsourced to China."
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaupunkt

    • These are obviously OEM Chinese units. Polaroid, JVC, Blaupunkt etc etc..all the same underneath.

      But I bought a generic 4k Chinese TV for $600 in 2012 (Harvey thought I was on drugs when I asked for a 4k tv back then). It's still running perfect today. LG panel. Bare bones (no backlight adjustments, no fancy upscaler). But the 4k picture is as good as any other VA panel today.
      Thinking of pulling the trigger on a generic OLED. See they are around $700 for a 65 (10 unit minimum)… Could get an ozbargain badge put on them.

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