vizio e700i b3 lcd panel pricelist

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The E700i-B3 has fast refresh rate 180 Hz. It means that the picture on the screen is updated 180 times per second. The more images per second are displayed - the more smoother the motion will appear on your television.
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Vizio"s E Series straddles an important mid-point between quality and affordability, which set it squarely in the "too good to be true" category when it debuted a few years ago.
The 2016 Vizio E Series aims to continue that tradition. This year, the E Series boasts a suite of forward-facing features—including 4K resolution (on some models) and a new, Google-cast based smart platform—while maintaining the same affordability—it"s around $200 for the 32-inch model.
The Vizio E Series 4k 2016 that we reviewed has a average picture quality for a 4k UHD TV. It has a lot of blur on fast action movements and its picture quality deteriorates quickly as soon as it is viewed slightly from the side. Only movies revealed to be a decent experience on it.Read more
THE GOOD The Vizio E series offers the best picture quality available in its price range, thanks to local dimming. The Google Cast system offers more apps and frequent updates than many dedicated smart-TV systems.
THE BOTTOM LINE If you"re OK with its missing extras, and make sure to get the right model, Vizio"s E series will reward you with the best budget TV picture quality yet.Read more

Experience more vibrant colors, more pronounced darks, more premium apps, and truly epic entertainment at an unbeatable value on the all-new, beautifully redesigned Vizio E700I-B3 70" Full Array LED Smart TV that invites you to enjoy a viewing experience that redefines reality on a large full HD 1080p 70" LED screen. Equipped with Smart TV and built-in Wi-Fi, you can enjoy movies, apps and more from the internet directly on the 70� LED Display. It supports a wide range of input technologies such as four HDMI, one USB, a single Ethernet port and a Composite and Component as well as Wi-Fi. Screen refresh rate of 120Hz ensures blur-free and distortion-free images even in fast screen transitions. Full Array LED backlighting across the entire rear of your television screen provides superior light uniformity, color consistency, and a more responsive picture. By combining an ultra-fast refresh rate and incredibly smooth Clear Action technology, E-Series delivers flawless picture performance, whether you�re playing your favorite first-person shooter video game, watching a high-speed chase scene in a blockbuster movie or seeing a big sports moment happen before your eyes. A super-fast 120Hz refresh rate combined with enhanced backlight scanning deliver an outstanding Clear Action of 180 for perfectly sharp images. This convenient and innovative technology enables you to control apps and seamlessly transfer content between your TV, mobile phone and tablet with the flick of a finger, for a truly integrated multi-screen viewing experience. An ultra-narrow frame, a thinner side profile, and slimmer new base makes the new E-Series a perfect upgrade to any room. Advanced virtual surround sound audio from VIZO�s two built-in speakers. The 10 W x 2 speakers give amazing stereo experience. Purchase the Vizio E700I-B3 70" Full Array LED Smart TV today!

For 2014, Vizio, in contrast (pun intended) to just about everyone else, offers even more local dimming TVs at more affordable prices than ever. The E series is the company"s cheapest line, and at 39 inches and up, most of them have that extra. And it works even better than it did last year.
Simply put, I"ll be incredibly surprised if any TV released this year offers a better combination of price and picture quality than the Vizio E series. The closest contender so far this year, in fact, comes from Vizio"s own camp in the form of the
I performed a hands-on evaluation of the 42-inch Vizio E420i-B0 as well as the 55-inch E550i-B2. The former was purchased by CNET on the open market and the latter supplied by Vizio.
According to Vizio, the remarks about the 42-inch size can also be applied to the 39-, 40-, and 48-inch members of the series listed here, and the observations on the 55-inch size to the 50-, 60-, 65-, and 70-inch members (the latter two are not available yet). The one exception is that "the E390i-B0 and E400i-B2 handle motion better than the E420i-B0 you tested," according to Vizio. I"ve asked for details and will update this section when I hear back.
Vizio didn"t reinvent the wheel when styling the E series. Both the E550i-B2 and the E420i-B0 look almost identical to their 2013 predecessors; Vizio has slimmed the bezel, but everything else is the same. The look could charitably be called "understated," or less diplomatically, "generic." Glossy black with nary an accent aside from the right-justified Vizio logo and a matte-black strip along the bottom.
After four years of complaining about Vizio"s remote, I"m going to just cut-and paste my words from 2011 here. If they"re not going to make the effort to change it, I won"t re-describe it: It lacks illumination, the menu/exit/guide/back keys are too small, there"s not enough differentiation, and no direct button to switch aspect ratio (it was added in 2012). Its best feature is dedicated keys for Amazon Instant, Netflix and Vudu streaming services M-Go.
The majority of 39-inch and larger members of the E series, including all of the ones with local dimming, have what Vizio calls a "120Hz effective ostensible improvements it doesn"t indicate the same kind of picture quality found on traditional 120Hz TVs.
You may also notice the absence of 3D in the chart above. Many of Vizio"s previous TVs, including in 2013 the M series and a few "E" series models, offered passive 3D compatibility. This year Vizio has dropped the feature entirely, announcing no 3D-compatible televisions so far in its 2014 E, M, or P or even the high-end R series.
Vizio"s content selection is very good. HBO Go isn"t available (it"s still a Samsung exclusive among TVs), and there are no major sports apps like MLB TV, NHL GameCenter, or NBA League Pass, but most of the other heavy-hitters for video are here. The meta-app "Web video" itself contains numerous sub-apps of specialized videos. Audio support is average: you get iHeartRadio, TuneIn, Pandora, and Rhapsody, but other subscription services (like Spotify, which is available on the M series) go missing.
Unlike most other major TV names, Vizio still doesn"t offer a Web browser in its Smart TV system. In our experience, that"s no major loss since it"s usually easier and better to use a laptop, tablet, or phone anyway. Still, it"s worth noting that some TV browsers -- namely Samsung and LG -- have improved a lot recently. Vizio"s system also lacks the many extras found on some others, including cable-box control, universal search, voice command, and more.
Picture settings:For 2014, Vizio has made a lot of changes in this department. The E series gets a number of preset picture modes that don"t allow any adjustment; changing a parameter like Brightness in one of these modes immediately changes the picture mode to Custom.
Normally I don"t like that kind of arrangement, since it"s a bit confusing and can lead to inadvertent changes of your custom settings, but Vizio has a cool solution. Not only can you lock the Custom modes, preventing any changes, but you can also create and even name entirely new modes.
Beyond modes, Vizio has added some additional controls, namely a full color-management system and an 11-point grayscale control. The 48-inch and larger sets also get a "Motion Blur Reduction" setting, the main manifestation of Vizio"s "Clear Action 180" feature. It engages backlight scanning to improve motion resolution, although it also introduces some visible flicker. See Video processing for details.
Black levels, thanks to the E series" local dimming, are superb for any LCD, and especially great for this price. Color accuracy and video processing are more of a mixed bag, but neither are deal-killers for all but the most persnickety videophiles. Add in superb bright-room performance and great uniformity for an LED LCD, and the E series is easily good enough for everyone else.
Black level:The E series performed extremely well in this area, coming close to matching the far more-expensive Sony W900A -- the best-performing LED LCD of last year -- and eclipsing other TVs that cost a lot more, including the 2013 Vizio M series and the other non-Vizio sets.
Color accuracy: This category was a sort of mixed bag for both Vizios. As my measurements indicate, the 55-inch set suffered from a less-accurate grayscale (that pesky calibration again) while the 42-incher showed a desaturated red. The 55-incher tended toward blue at the extreme dark and bright ends of the scale, an issue visible as the astronauts" space suits swung alternately into shadow and bright sunlight.
Uniformity: Neither E series review sample evinced any major issues in this area, thanks in part to their full-array LED schemes. Both showed better uniformity than the 2013 E series set, with its slightly splotchy white fields, and outdid the edge-lit models, in particular the Samsung and the Vizio M series, at maintaining even lighting in dark areas. From off-angle, the 55-inch set maintained fidelity a bit better than the 42, but neither was significantly better than the others in this regard.
Sound quality:Neither Vizio sounded good, even for a TV. All of the other sets in our lineup delivered superior audio to some extent, and the H6350 and W850B in particular trounced the Vizios. On my music test, "Red Right Hand" by Nick Cave, the 55-incher produced wavering, somewhat unclear vocals, impact-free percussion, and an overall distorted sound when I put the volume to low-medium (40 or higher). The 42-incher sounded even worse; thinner with less bass and more distortion. With "Mission: Impossible 3" it was more of the same; the effects and explosions from the bridge scene lacking impact and causing the sound to break apart at times.
Ms.Josey
Ms.Josey