Sharp LC-70N7100U Review

4K Aquos TV, 4K Media Player and Receiver included

by , Senior Editor

Hisense-Sharp Takeover

Hisense, a large Chinese manufacturer licensed the Sharp name in June of 2015. Hisense is not a well known brand in the U.S., but it is in China, where the company has the number 1 market share in units sold. It's also reportedly #3 globally in units sold with over 16 million TVs produced. Hisense is focusing on low priced models as well as high quality featured TVs all the way up to THX certification in its bid to gain U.S. Market share. Hisense purchased the Sharp brand and the Mexico assembly facility in a $23M deal. The Sharp models will purportedly still use the Sharp LCD panels in their production.

Picture Quality

The N7000 series bumps the resolution to 4K UHD, and has solid picture quality with a good front and center viewing black levels and color saturation. HD 720P, 1080p signals and lower are upconverted by the Revelation upscaler. This is one of the most important elements of any 4K TV as there is still little available content. Most of what we watch is still 1080p (if we're lucky) but mostly 720p and 480p.

HDR Enabled

My take is that if future HDR content is a major consideration to you, then this is probably not the TV for you. HDR is a ways off really getting going with content. The N7000U is HDR “enabled” meaning you will be able to accept HDR mastered content and display it, but not in its full glory. You would see it in HD or 4K or whatever the resolution is but without the HDR widened and brighter color spectrum.

Colors and black levels do degrade at side angles starting at 15 degrees off center. Brightness levels are fine. There is some perceived lack of depth in on-screen images.

Aquodimming is present in this TV, which is contrast enhanced in areas of the screen by manipulating the backlight. The effects seem negligible when testing.

Full Array Local Dimming

Full array local dimming is a major benefit as LED backlights are controlled by zonal manipulation in such a way that they can help increase contrast in various areas of on-screen images. In a 70” TV they are especially beneficial. We give the N7100U an average rating in full array local dimming processing and presentation, but the feature is welcome.

Sharp LC-70N7100U
A stunning 4K image displayed on the Sharp N1000.

Features

Obviously, the N7100 series is a value oriented 4K oriented TV., but it still packs some surprising features. It has a built in streaming Apps selection including the usual suspects that you use most like Netflix, Amazon on Demand, and You Tube. Built in Dual Band Wifi. An Apps store and web browser. And a media player/receiver. It also has the Sharp “Aquomotion” designation which manipulates the backlight in order to show a perceived smoother picture (increased Hz rate designation). Gaming input lag is very average on this TV, not up to par with mid range Samsung, LG and Vizio models.

Price/Value

The 70N7100 series is a high value focused model with 4K resolution and a good upscaling engine. At around $1899 the 70N7100U is a great value for this size and quality of TV if you are not sensitive to the TV having a great Streaming Video package. You get 4K resolution, HDR enabled, the quality Sharp panel and though it's not the best panel in the market, it's hard to argue with the price.

(A note about our reviews. Our professional reviewers begin our reviews with our initial impressions about quality of picture and features inclusion, then we add specifications, then value and pricing information, and finally, ratings. When our reviews contain an overall rating, they are complete. Thank you for reading!)



Robert Wiley Having reviewed and written about Television Technology for over 10 years, Wiley never tires of researching the newest qualitative trends related to the technology. Most people do not get excited about possibilities behind the latest video engine... Wiley does. Read more about Robert