The Kogan 50” LED 4K Smart AI Google TV is a great choice for anyone looking to upgrade their home entertainment experience. With its large 50” screen, 4K resolution and HDR support, you can enjoy stunning visuals with amazing clarity and detail.
- UHD 4K Resolution. Experience awesome image quality.
- High-Dynamic Range. Brighter highlights, better contrast and more realistic colours.
- Dolby Vision™ & Atmos™. Create a cinematic immersion with lifelike and vibrant visuals and immersive sound.
- Google TV. Unleash the power of Google Assistant and voice search.
- Google Play Store. Easy access to more than 10,000 apps.
- Built-in Google Chromecast. Stream from your smartphone, laptop or tablet to your TV.
- Wi-Fi, Ethernet & HDMI inputs. Enjoy effortless media playback with ease.
Kogan 50" LED 4K Smart AI Google TV - U94T $469 Delivered (FIRST, $509 non-Members) @ Dick Smith (Kogan)
Last edited 22/09/2024 - 06:28 by 1 other user
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WHY I ALWAYS MISS THE DEALS 😭😭😭😭😭😭
Thumbs up for the deal.
I'm going a bit off topic now, but I hate how these crooks target the less informed.
"This product comes with a 1 Year Warranty. Purchase 3 Year or 5 Year of Extended Care including Mishap Protection for added peace of mind"
Is this even legal in NZ today? I guess it is, but it shouldn't be.Stuff says more than 2 years
https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/109457888/should-i-expect-m…
Consumer says 8 years
https://www.consumer.org.nz/articles/appliance-life-expectan…I wish the consumer guarantees act would be more definitive than saying products must last a reasonable amount of time.
Does anyone know if there are any previous legal precedents that can be referenced?It’s deliberately vague and that helps the consumer more than the seller.
But it puts the onus on the consumer to prove to the person making judgment (who is this, a judge?) that it failed in an unreasonable amount of time.
This is harder for the less privileged (time, money, access to legal resources make it easier to put forward a winning argument).It's not wrong to say a reasonable amount of time, What's reasonable is very hard (impossible) to define at a point in time for all consumer items. CGA was written in 1993 https://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1993/0091/latest/…
It would nice if some agency (Commerce Commission?) published examples of recent decisions for common items that have had warranty successfully challenged under the CGA
The last bit you said would be useful for sure, I had Dells rep have the nerve to tell the DT the hinge failure on their laptop was from misuse(after a bit under 3 years normal use) for a 2k laptop then turn white when I gave them both a folder with over 200 printouts from Dells support forum where users with the same SKU or similar SKU's with the same internal hinge all had the same failure in a similar or less timeframe and that was only after searching/printing for a few hours on their own support forum.
The referee just laughed when they checked a few random pages and told them to sort the issue out or pay the full purchase price back because it was clearly a substantial known fault.
Depends what you're going for, but it's setup to not need legal resources unless you're going after something massive.
It's usually a case of "this cost a bunch of money and is a mid to high end model, it should last longer than the two years it did".
Be aware that if you're buying a bargain basement model you're up for a harder time challenging this than a name brand like Sony, Samsung etc.
I would expect 2-3 years with any TV purchase should be ok but these are cheap and potentially nasty so 3+ years would be hard to argue.
At that rate this TV has cost you just $150 per year to own.There are plenty of examples like this:
https://comcom.govt.nz/news-and-media/media-releases/2022/tv…But that DSE Kogan extended warranty includes Mishap as well, so it's basically buying something like home contents insurance.
@The Hound: Only for 12 months, after that theres no mishap protection and you are in the same situation where your home and contents excess may be more than what the TV is worth.
@Dunno: wow, always pays to read those tiny fine print!
@The Hound: Refer the above "these crooks"
How does this compare to the other budget tv's mentioned in the forum thread?
https://www.thewarehouse.co.nz/p/veon-55-inch-4k-ultra-hd-go…
https://www.thewarehouse.co.nz/p/jvc-50-inch-4k-ultra-hd-qle…
https://www.harveynorman.co.nz/tv-and-audio/televisions/konk…
https://www.warehousestationery.co.nz/product/W2837224.htmlBirds of a feather. Definitely avoid if you want to do any sort of gaming on them, but for media viewing of streamed content they'll be fine.
I have both the JVC 50(1 year) and Veon 42(6years) both used mainly as computer monitors running 4K 60 Hz Mini Mac and iMac they have an excellent picture and clarity for the price. Main thing if there's any warranty just put them in your car and take them to the warehouse rather than organising courier packages through Kogan. Also you should always keep your packaging just in case it's a lot safer to transport.
Can you double check that link - doesn't seem to go anywhere.
Though searching for it on their website, its like the 50" u94t which is $399 AUD or $469 NZ
Buying it via Dick Smith (same company etc) does give you free shipping though.
Dick Smith: https://www.dicksmith.co.nz/dn/buy/kogan-50-led-4k-smart-goo…
Kogan NZ: https://www.kogan.com/nz/buy/kogan-50-led-4k-smart-google-tv…
Kogan AU: https://www.kogan.com/au/buy/kogan-50-led-4k-smart-google-tv…