Polaroid P55D600 55-inch UHD review: Where to buy
You can only buy the P55D60) and P65D600 from Asda as the Polaroid brand – in the UK – is owned by Asda. The TVs aren’t available to buy online, and it’s worth calling your local store to check stock before making a trip. See also: Best smart TV deals
Polaroid P55D600 55-inch UHD review: Design and features
Certainly this big panel looks the part: it’s network connected, offers 2160p resolution and is 3D ready. A pack of eight cheap polarising 3D glasses are included in the box. It’s a nice enough looker too. The bezel is thin, with a chrome wrap around the edge of the screen. The TV stands on two shiny plastic feet. Inside there’s a single Freeview HD tuner, although you can record from it to a USB HDD. There are four HDMI inputs, but only one HDMI is 4K HDCP 2.2 compliant. This will restrict your options as 4K content services begin. There’s also component AV input, a minijack for Scart with supplied adaptor, a trio of USBs, a digital optical audio for use with soundbars and a VGA PC input. In addition to Ethernet LAN, the set offers dual-band integrated Wi-Fi. App support is rather limited. The set has a Netflix client, but as the TV lacks an HEVC decoder, there’s no option for 4K streaming. Catch-up is limited to the BBC iPlayer. You can also view YouTube, BBC News and Sport, Dailymotion, Viewster or download an assortment of general purpose diversions (Flickr, TuneIn radio, iConcerts, Accuweather, Twitter and Facebook). There’s also a Media Player for DLNA network and USB sources. File support for video is wide, stretching from MKV to AVI. The audio player handles MP3, WMA, AAC, PCM and WAV but not FLAC. While this Polaroid may not impress with its catch-up provision, image quality is actually rather good. The P55D600 doesn’t offer have high refresh rates or image interpolation tech, but that’s not an issue if you only want a big, cinematic pictures. It looks good with HD sources from TV and Blu-ray. With high contrast and vibrant colour reproduction, this is an easy image to like. This isn’t a difficult set to set up either, although there are caveats. The TV ships with exaggerated edge-enhancement. Sharpness should be set to zero. Anything higher introduces unwanted ringing artefacts.
Polaroid P55D600 55-inch UHD review: performance
3D is more trouble than it’s worth. Dimensional imaging is very directional, often resulting in the top half of the panel out of focus while the bottom is in, or vice versa. Audio is unimpressive. The downward firing speakers lack volume and sound monophonic.