Great informative Video. FYI-you can find home flat screen 4K TV's that are also AC/DC compatible and are substantially cheaper than "RV' televisions. If the TV power cord has a box between the TV and the outlet, it's a converter that coverts 110 volts to either 12, 19 or 24 volts. The Samsung TV I installed in my rig had a box that converted 110 volt to 19 volt. In my installation, I simply cut off the box, added a Uxcell brand Power Voltage Converter (12 volt to 19 volt) and connected it to my 12 volt system. Another thing. I also installed a home Sony Blue Ray player which was AC/DC compatible; It also had the converter box (110 volt to 12 volt) on the power cord. I simply cut off the converter box and wired the TV directly to my 12 volt system. The TV and Blue Ray player have been on my rig for over two years with no issues.
Was looking into this just for my room; I mainly use my phone and laptop right now but want something that can just be playing on the background while I am doing work; I keep reading about the sound quality being bad but idk how bad it is relative to a small room I am pretty blind so I plan on getting a big screen; like you said DVD player isn’t really much of a sell anymore Idek where the DVDs are in my house but I know basically all the movies and shows on DVD I have/had can be found online now so I would just cast it
I have the 27 inch version of this TV. I have a sound bar that connects thru HDMIarc. This TV says it has HDMIarc in the menu. But, it is not labeled where the arc connection is or how to connect it. Do you have any ideas? I can hook it up to the optical connection, but it doesn't have the sound options that HDMIarc does.
Wow only 35 watts! 😱💕👏👍 nice find
These 12 volt TV's work great. We have a small one in our camper. I did have to add a external speaker to get a bass sound. 👍👍
will it play movies off a hard drive?
Great informative Video. FYI-you can find home flat screen 4K TV's that are also AC/DC compatible and are substantially cheaper than "RV' televisions. If the TV power cord has a box between the TV and the outlet, it's a converter that coverts 110 volts to either 12, 19 or 24 volts. The Samsung TV I installed in my rig had a box that converted 110 volt to 19 volt. In my installation, I simply cut off the box, added a Uxcell brand Power Voltage Converter (12 volt to 19 volt) and connected it to my 12 volt system.
Another thing. I also installed a home Sony Blue Ray player which was AC/DC compatible; It also had the converter box (110 volt to 12 volt) on the power cord. I simply cut off the converter box and wired the TV directly to my 12 volt system. The TV and Blue Ray player have been on my rig for over two years with no issues.
Was looking into this just for my room; I mainly use my phone and laptop right now but want something that can just be playing on the background while I am doing work; I keep reading about the sound quality being bad but idk how bad it is relative to a small room I am pretty blind so I plan on getting a big screen; like you said DVD player isn’t really much of a sell anymore Idek where the DVDs are in my house but I know basically all the movies and shows on DVD I have/had can be found online now so I would just cast it
For a smaller space, I think the sound is good enough.
What’s the cost?
I have the 27 inch version of this TV. I have a sound bar that connects thru HDMIarc. This TV says it has HDMIarc in the menu. But, it is not labeled where the arc connection is or how to connect it. Do you have any ideas? I can hook it up to the optical connection, but it doesn't have the sound options that HDMIarc does.
I don’t know off hand… do you have a manual you can reference? Sometimes the Amazon listing will have a pdf version of the manual as a link.
How do you wall mount this tv
You need to buy a wall mount. The manufacturer sells one or a universal one can be found on Amazon
It should have Android 14.
Don’t like smart TVs, as they spy on you! But I do like 12 V capability.
How do they spy on you? I agree, the 12v option is great for RVs/campers.
@@EndgameCampers
The number one way is the camera on the face of the TV. Connection to the web.
I don’t think this TV has a camera