Skip to main content

Toshiba 55UX600 Review

Toshiba 55UX600
Toshiba 55UX600
“The Toshiba 55UX600 is not a screaming buy, but it’s still a good television that easily connects to the web at the touch of your remote.”
Pros
  • 1080p, 120 Hz edge-lit LED HDTV
  • WLAN Adaptor supplied
  • Easy Net access
  • Solid picture quality but not outstanding
  • 4 HDMI inputs
Cons
  • Does not support Netflix
  • Remote could be better
  • Full-array backlit sets are much better but costlier
  • Higher-quality surround circuitry would be a plus

Introduction

While folks are chomping at the bit for 3D HDTVs—or so the industry would have you believe—Internet-connected sets are real and arriving at a rapid clip. Everyone has them including Samsung, Sony, Panasonic, LG, Sharp and now Toshiba. The net-connected UX600 lets you access YouTube videos, download VUDU movies, check out photos on Flickr, listen to Internet radio, access news streams and lots more. Competing models offer similar features. Along with dancing soldiers on YouTube you can also check out traditional HDTV programs and Blu-ray movies to round out your entertainment buffet. Let’s see if the 55UX600 satisfied our appetites…

Features and Design

The Toshiba 55UX600 is fairly straight ahead flat-panel display. No curvy lines like those found on LG sets or splashes of color from Samsung. Our unit was basic black. Toshiba calls it a Thin Air Lagoon design but we didn’t hear any Hawaiian music in the background after setting it up. Still it’s not unattractive–just don’t expect to be wowed. What will impress you is the slimness, which is a shade under 2 inches (1.96 to be exact). Other dimensions are 53 inches wide, 33 tall plus it tips the scales at 63 pounds with the stand.

The front is a clean and simple as can be. There’s an illuminated Toshiba logo on the lower bezel along with power on/off and self timer indicators. Off to the left is the remote sensor while the Auto Brightness Sensor is on the right. This last sensor adjusts backlighting levels to match the light in your room.

The right side panel has the controls you’ll never use (on/off, channel up/down and so on) since if you’re like us, the remote never leaves your hand. Below them are load of inputs including an SD card slot, USB 1, Ethernet, USB 2 (for the WLAN adaptor), two HDMI and a set of component ins. On the rear are additional ins and outs including two more HDMI ins, PC audio and PC video ins, digital audio and IR sensor outs along with antenna/cable in. This is a good selection although we wish the SD card reader handled other files such as AVCHD videos rather than basic JPEG photos.

What’s In The Carton

You get the television, 106-page Owner’s Manual, cleaning cloth, Allen wrench to connect the display to the supplied stand and a remote with two AAA batteries. What is a bit different is the supplied Dual Band WLAN Adaptor (802.11a/b/g/n) so you can tap into your router. Most other brands make you pay another $100 or so for the adaptor.

Definitely have a friend help you unpack the HDTV and assemble it—especially the 55-inch model. Once the 55UX600 was in position with sources connected, it was time to see how it performed.

Performance and Use

Connecting Blu-ray and HD cable boxes via HDMI is about as easy as it gets. A wireless connection with the router is something else. We put the supplied WLAN adaptor into the dedicated USB port and had no troubles whatsoever linking to our router two floors above the set. Entering the WEP code with the remote was a bit tedious but hardly a problem. Speaking of the supplied remote, we’ll spare you our usual rant about the unsophisticated controllers packed with $2,000 televisions – buy a Logitech Harmony and be done with it.

Once you’re set up, just tap the Widgets key on the Toshiba remote and you’ll get a serious taste of Net TV with everything from 1080p VUDU movies, Facebook, Twitter, the NY Times and dozens more. It is, however, missing Netflix integration. This is not a huge deal since you can get Netflix on most Blu-ray players and game consoles. We were pleasantly surprised at the quality of streamed movies like Alice In Wonderland and definitely liked accessing our Pandora Radio account to hear some tunes. Given the dearth of first-run shows this summer, surfing these sites is a real plus.

The Internet is great but any laptop with a Wi-Fi connection gets you to these sites and more. The 55UX600 is first and foremost an HDTV, and a big one at that with a 55-inch screen and a $2,000 price tag. We settled in to watch a variety of programs via HDMI from our Verizon FiOS cable box and Panasonic Blu-ray player.

Like all quality HDTVs, the Toshiba offers many tweaking options—especially for video. They range from AutoView which adjusts quality depending on the ambient light and source material, Sports, Game, Movie, PC and Standard. You can make loads of adjustments for each depending on the setting. We kept it in AutoView most of the time but in Standard and Movie adjusted the color and contrast to our liking.

Audio adjustments are limited by comparison, but there’s a faux surround option that enhances the soundstage a bit, but is a mere shadow of a real 5.1-system. Like almost all flat-panel HDTVs, the UX600 has 20 watts of total audio power (10+10) for the two speakers which are located in the lower portion of the set. The down-firing speakers produce decent sound but you should really opt for at least a sound bar to add to the experience. On the plus side it has Audyssey EQ circuitry built-in to help the small speakers along by smoothing out some of the distortion inherent in speakers crammed into tiny spaces (i.e. the frames of HDTVs).

The 55UX600 uses an edge-lit LED backlighting system which has its pluses and minuses. It costs much less than full-array LED systems with local dimming as found in the Toshiba 46SV670, a TV with very deep blacks and great picture quality. Along with a lower price, edge-lit systems allow for very thin panels, about half the depth of the SV670. Admittedly a quality step-down from the company’s top-of-the-line Cinema Series, how did it stand on its own?

With the set in AutoView, we watched some FIFA game highlights–a great test for LCD blur–and the UX600’s 120Hz technology handled it well. Along with soccer and baseball we also watched a variety of other programming. Picture quality was decent but without the pop of the Cinema Series HDTVs or other full-array backlit sets. As DigitalTrends.com readers know, we still feel plasma has the best blacks and contrast; the UX600 is clearly lesser quality. After watching a variety of BD disks, we came away with same conclusion. Overall picture and sound quality were good but not at the same level of other HDTVs we’ve reviewed.

Conclusion

The Toshiba 55UX600 has a $2,499 MSRP but goes for around $2K at legit online sellers. Samsung’s Ethernet-only 55-inch Internet LED HDTV is around the same price, while a Panasonic a 54-inch Wi-Fi-ready G25 plasma is also around $2,000 including the optional WLAN accessory for your router. Given the similar pricing, the Toshiba is not a screaming buy, but it’s still a good television that easily connects to the web at the touch of your remote. After watching Net TV struggle along for years, we’re glad to see a gangly child up and running along like a FIFA all-star. We just wish this NET TV was a true world champion and included the likes of Netflix. If we could have our dream set, let Toshiba add Internet capability and widgets to a SV670 Cinema Series edition. It would definitely cost more but would be a dynamite package.

Highs:

  • 1080p, 120 Hz edge-lit LED HDTV
  • WLAN Adaptor supplied
  • Easy Net access
  • Solid picture quality but not outstanding
  • 4 HDMI inputs

Lows:

  • Does not support Netflix
  • Remote could be better
  • Full-array backlit sets are much better but costlier
  • Higher-quality surround circuitry would be a plus
David Elrich
David has covered the consumer electronics industry since the "ancient" days of the Walkman. He is a "consumer’s"…
There’s a rare deal on the Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones today
Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones seen in black.

The massively popular Sony WH-1000XM5 wireless headphones rarely appear in headphone deals, so if you've had your eye on them for quite a while, you're in luck because they're currently $51 off on Walmart. From their original price of $400, you'll only have to pay $349, but only if you hurry because we don't expect stocks to last long. You're going to miss out on the offer if you take too long, so don't hesitate -- add the wireless headphones to your cart and check out as fast as you can.

Why you should buy the Sony WH-1000XM5
The best headphones that you can buy right now are the Sony WH-1000XM5 wireless headphones, and it's not even close. At the heart is their outstanding wireless sound, supported by top-quality active noise cancellation that uses two processors and eight microphones to block all unwanted sound, as well as crystal-clear hands-free calling using four beamforming microphones and advanced audio signal processing. The wireless headphones also offer Bluetooth multipoint connection so that you can quickly switch between different devices, touch controls for functions like adjusting volume and calling your digital assistant, and Speak-to-Chat and Quick Attention features to stop your music and let ambient sound in without having to take them off.

Read more
Sony’s premium soundbars will finally get support for VRR, ALLM
Sony HT-A7000 Dolby Atmos soundbar close-up of top panel.

It's been a long time coming, but the wait is almost over. Sony's premium home theater soundbars are set to receive a software update that will add support for variable refresh rate (VRR) and auto low-latency mode (ALLM), two HDMI 2.1 gaming features that have been absent since these products launched.

The soundbars in question are the Sony HT-A5000, HT-A7000, and the multi-wireless speaker HT-A9 system. All three are scheduled to receive the update this fall, but Sony has declined to share specific timing, saying only that there will be more information closer to the rollout date.

Read more
What is Roku? The streaming platform explained
A roku powered TV hanging on a wall running Roku OS 12.

How do you get your Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, or Prime Video fix? Chances are it's through a streaming device or smart TV, and there's a good chance that it's through a Roku device or one running its pioneering streaming operating system. At this point, cord-cutting is old news, and Roku was one of the earliest companies to drive the adoption of web-based streaming with its self-contained, app-driven devices.

Today, watching something "on Roku" is standard parlance and the company's popular platform can be found baked into some of the biggest TV brands in the world as well as in its own lineup of streaming devices sticks, and set-top boxes. Even so, that doesn't mean you totally get what a Roku actually is. What is Roku? How does Roku work? Do you need a subscription to use it? Is it just a device you buy, or is it software?

Read more