![]() eARC and a touch of HDMI 2.1 specificationĪt this price, we’re not expecting any cutting-edge features or functionality.Go right ahead: the AU7100 is a touch under 6cm deep, and it will happily fit onto any VESA wall bracket. Of course, you may wish to hang your new TV on the wall. They leave enough room between the screen and the surface it’s standing on for a soundbar, but they’re quite far apart, which means you’ll need a fairly wide surface on which to place this TV. Its bezels are slim, its plastics (and it’s almost entirely plastic) don’t feel overtly cheap, and the simple push-and-click ‘boomerang’ feet look nicely functional. So the fact the UE43AU7100 is an anonymous looker is, we reckon, a good thing. There’s a lot to be said for keeping design ‘flourishes’ to a minimum where TVs are concerned, and that goes double for models that are meant to appeal to as many people as possible. But when those markets get their own bespoke AU7100 variant, you can be sure of a couple of things: first, it will be available in a large number of screen sizes and second, it will be very competitively priced. Samsung likes to tailor its truly mainstream TV ranges to the specific territory in which they’re sold – and this is the reason there’s currently no like-for-like equivalent to the AU7100 in either Australia or the US. We’ve tried to come up with a scenario in which an AU7100 wouldn’t fit the bill, size-wise – but so far we’ve got nothing. Of course, since Samsung intends this range to have the broadest possible appeal, it’s also available as a 50in model, as well as 55in, 58in, 65in, 70in, 75in and 85in versions. The Samsung UE43AU7100 is on sale now, and in the UK it’s yours for no more than £449.
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