@@paulpatel7904 if you say so...I've heard all of them...not worth the prices. You could get considerably better speakers for a lot cheaper...or better yet have them built. These mass produced speakers don't use the best parts and until you've listened to a custom made speaker (which is much cheaper to do) you don't know what your missing out on. Go check out GR Research's channel.
@@GSP-76 gr research is bias and focus on selling his products that heing said they are over priced for the most part the q series is pretty good for hometheater but not for music but most people build specifically for hometheater or gr research talks about klipsch center how it's highs are to high and lows dip off its a center speaker for example most people that has hometheaters has a subwoofer and all low frequency it kicked over to the sub from the set crossover point and almost every avr reciver correction rolls of the highs so it ends up making the frequency more flat talking about his klipsch 504 review btw their crossovers are cheap not the best cheap caps but it's targeted for hometheater so you don't need to get caught up on all the fine details it's more about surround sound it provides and klipsch is known for having very very good pin point accuracy when it comes to sound and when it comes to multiple seats in the theater the spl is about the same across all seatings that being said kef has some good build quality and high quality part but not as much as custom and custom you can build a cheaper speaker for the same high quality parts but if you are new to building it you are going have to buy a bunch of software and equipment to fine-tune the speaker and crossover settings most people trying to save money isn't trying to build a better sounding speaker then the kef blades as you mentioned the easily solution it having a class d amp on every speaker in your system with its own cross over for high fidelity
No good if we can't see the quality of the display OUTDOORS. I've seen reviews where brightness quality is very disappointing. Almost as good as an indoor TV.
How can you call it the BEST outdoor TV unless you do comparisons with Skyvue or other top names? I see Skyvue with higher nits, plus smart controls. Let do a direct review against the two.
I hate how they're crippled with the low Uni Q driver. if they just added the LF woofers at the sides or even did two at the bottom and two at the back coupled the Uni Q can be up at actual ear level.
I wish they would release some of the older less expensive technology on larger formats like this. I have an 86”LG that cost me $5k and that same tv is now $2500. My room requires a larger format but anything over 86” jumps to $50k+ I don’t need 6k or 8k and I’m fine with some black color issues as a trade off for larger screen.
I believe Sharp makes a 90" screen for about $6k that's 4k. All of these companies always go for the best possible picture when making things in new sizes. But to be most cost effective projectors are the best way to get very big screen sizes without getting too insane on pricing!
I have not heard the Focal Aria 948 speakers, However the R11's sound amazing. They will work awesome for 2 channel. You will want to get a 2 channel amp that pushes about 200w to get full benefit from them!
I have no idea why the big craze these days is using your voice to control things. I don't get it!!! Why would anyone want to use there voice to chance the channel on the TV or make it a few degrees warmer. I absolutely hate this. Why cant we just have one interface for every device that has a actual button to control what you want. Just my two cents...
There’s often times your hands are full. I use Google a ton in the kitchen to avoid touching light switches, ventilation, timers and preheating the oven while my hands are dirty.
@@LiquidusSnake I'm sorry you think we are dumb. But a simple google search would show you that there are only 2 people making 98" 8K Tv's. Sony and Samsung both over 60k. Not sure where you think you can get a 98" Tv for under 10k.