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it was a awe of time getting this TV as after 5 + years it seems to be breaking down, not worth the money I paid for it, anyone feel the same about SONY TVs
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Hi @greekgod123
Are you running the latest software for this TV?
https://www.sony.co.uk/electronics/support/lcd-tvs-kdlxxw7xxb-series/kdl-42w705b/downloads/00016378
Ah, I see you lump the people trying to help you (or at least to more accurately reset your expectations) in with the TV.
So this is a third-tier (according to What Hi-Fi?) HD set from 2014, predating Android (no bad thing, I think), no 3D, no 4K, thin sound and perhaps a bit expensive for what it is (again according to What Hi-Fi?).
But would you be surprised to hear that I am keeping a 2012 32in HD Samsung, picture easily as good as our 2018 version but with its apps shot to b*ggery by the passage of time and the unwillingness of the app developers to keep supporting this superannuated model, going?
Hardware as good as ever, which I regard as a bonus, not an expectation, on a 7-year-old TV, and its original smarts restored, and even exceeded, by the £30 Roku Stick+ poking out of one of the HDMI ports?
I commend you to do the same, for the very small amount of money, not ‘plenty of money’ this costs.
And be very glad your set was made by Sony, and not by Whirlpool 😛
Sorry about that 🙃
Personally, I think that if a TV is advertised as having certain apps, there should be a legal obligation on the app providers to keep them running for (say) a minimum of five years from the date the model is superseded, or declared no longer current, i.e. the same obligation there is on the providers of the hardware components.
But the practical path when your favourite apps start to be supported no longer, is to buy a smart device and plug it in to your TV, of which the Roku Sticks and Boxes are easily the most versatile.
This means the TV can maintain, or even upgrade, its current smarts for as long as its HDMI ports stay supported.
You didn't even state what kind of very old tv you have and which problem you had... so what kind of answer do you expect?
Hi @greekgod123
Sony TVs range from cheap & cheerful to the expensive master series. What is the full model number of your crap TV? It will start with KD.
It's puzzling me why you would keep a crap TV for 5 years then complain is it really the tv that's crap or what your watching on it? Because there is a big difference.
A reasonable life for a consumer item like a TV Is reckoned to be about 6 years.
I’d say you’ve had your money’s-worth.
model number KDL-42W705B
It's obviously that you'r easily pleased and have plenty of money to waste on upgrading your electrical appliances.
Hi @greekgod123
Are you running the latest software for this TV?
https://www.sony.co.uk/electronics/support/lcd-tvs-kdlxxw7xxb-series/kdl-42w705b/downloads/00016378
Ah, I see you lump the people trying to help you (or at least to more accurately reset your expectations) in with the TV.
So this is a third-tier (according to What Hi-Fi?) HD set from 2014, predating Android (no bad thing, I think), no 3D, no 4K, thin sound and perhaps a bit expensive for what it is (again according to What Hi-Fi?).
But would you be surprised to hear that I am keeping a 2012 32in HD Samsung, picture easily as good as our 2018 version but with its apps shot to b*ggery by the passage of time and the unwillingness of the app developers to keep supporting this superannuated model, going?
Hardware as good as ever, which I regard as a bonus, not an expectation, on a 7-year-old TV, and its original smarts restored, and even exceeded, by the £30 Roku Stick+ poking out of one of the HDMI ports?
I commend you to do the same, for the very small amount of money, not ‘plenty of money’ this costs.
And be very glad your set was made by Sony, and not by Whirlpool 😛