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Hisense 58-Inch Class U6HF Series ULED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV (58U6HF) - QLED, Full Array Local Dimming , 600-Nit Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDMI 2.1, Game Mode Plus VRR, Alexa Compatibility, Black

  • Based on 4,319 reviews
Condition: New
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$349.99 Why this price?
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Saturday, Nov 30
Order within 15 hours and 29 minutes
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Size: 58-Inch


Features

  • 4K ULED: Like great, but better. The 58U6HF has our exclusive ULED technologies. They boost color, contrast, brightness, motion... we could go on. It's the TV your old TV wants to be.
  • Quantum Dot Wide Color Gamut: Quantum Dot produces purer, richer, more brilliant and accurate colors than a regular LED TV. Creating over a billion color combinations brings vibrant images to life in a way non-QLED TVs can't.
  • Fire TV Built-in: With Fire TV built-in, you can enjoy a world of entertainment from apps like Prime Video, Netflix, Disney plus, Hulu, and HBO Max. Plus, stream for free with Freevee, Pluto TV, Tubi, and more. Subscription may be required.
  • Peak Brightness / Full Array Local Dimming Zones: This television offers up-to-600 nits peak brightness across up to 32 local dimming zones. Above average peak brightness and local dimming are critical to correctly reproducing HDR content.
  • Dolby Vision HDR, HDR10, and HDR10+: Transform your TV into an entertainment powerhouse. The image technology from cinemas, now brought directly to your home, provide amazing realism that you'll experience like never before.
  • Motion Rate 240, 60Hz Native Refresh Rate and HDMI 2.1: The TV's HDMI 2.1(eARC) port is the foundation for its 240 motion rate and native 60Hz refresh rate. These technologies work in concert to make fast-action scenes to ensure moving objects have minimal blurring.
  • Press & Ask Alexa: Use the included Alexa Voice Remote to manage TV power, volume, navigation, playback, and input switching. Or just press the microphone button and say, "Find dramas," and Alexa will show you search results from a central catalog of hundreds of integrated apps and channels.
  • Bluetooth Connectivity: Wirelessly connect soundbars, headphones or stereo components to your TV. This quick and convenient connection eliminates unwanted and unsightly cords while providing a secure connection to your audio source.
  • Metal Stand, Bezel-less Design: A bezel-less design gives this television a sleek aesthetic that wont overpower the room with an unnecessarily large frame. The metal stand provides sturdy support for this feature-packed television.
  • Warranty: 2-year warranty

Description

We're bringing Quantum Dot Color to the people. You’re welcome. Enjoy over one billion colors. The UHF Fire TV also has 4K resolution, Dolby Vision HDR, HDR10, HDR10+, and Full Array Local Dimming Zones. Especially with a quad-core processor managing all the algorithms that add up to more colors.

Screen Size: 57.6 Inches


Brand: Hisense


Display Technology: QLED


Resolution: 4K


Refresh Rate: 60 Hz


Special Feature: Quantum Dot, 4K, Fire TV, Alexa Compatibility


Included Components: Stand, TV, Remote Control, Power Cable, Quick Start Guide


Connectivity Technology: Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, HDMI


Aspect Ratio: 169


Product Dimensions: 50.8"D x 3.1"W x 29.6"H


Brand Name: ‎Hisense


Item Weight: ‎34 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎50.8 x 3.1 x 29.6 inches


Item model number: ‎58U6HF


Color Name: ‎Black


Special Features: ‎Quantum Dot, 4K, Fire TV, Alexa Compatibility


Speaker Type: ‎Built-In


Item Weight: ‎34 Pounds


Standing screen display size: ‎57.6 Inches


Aspect Ratio: ‎169


Voltage: ‎120 Volts


Wattage: ‎256 kWh


Date First Available: September 7, 2022


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Nov 30

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I would not hesitate to buy the brand again when considering price vs quality.
Size: 75-Inch
I wanted an 86" Hisense with the same number of mini-LED dimming zones but as I had not saw a mini-LED in person before and none were available locally to see I decided to try out a 75" mini-LED of the same model as the price was more than 50% less. I'm glad I did. At 75" there is plenty of room for a set of stereo speakers stretched along the bottom of the TV and the TV sounds good, not great, I plan to remedy that later with a Hisense Dolby 5.2 Speaker setup. The screen looks great, but it can't rescue 360-resolutions at all, and only manages to rescue 480-resolutions if the source material is impeccable. As there is so much old 480i/480p source material that will never be duplicated with modern shows it was a bit of relief to see Pink Panther and other old cartoon look so good on that big of a screen. At times the higher claimed resolutions like 720p and 1080p are dubious if they really are at the claimed resolution but that's on the streaming provider (YouTube, TUBI, and too many more to shake a stick at). So far, all 2160p resolution shows have looked quite often like you are looking through a glass window. It's almost odd. There are some things when you see shows on such a big clear screen that expose some of the old tricks of professional film making that you never noticed on a 10" to 27" CRT screens of the 60s and 70s. Examples are some of the factory rooms in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory are kind of amateur looking, but the movie is still great. Likewise, the some of the animations in the Pink Panther are looking like frames get skipped, but they aren't, it's the nature of digitizing light and then showing on the big TV screen. Even worse are some panning scenes with only a static background. Since those are all cartoons it's not something that really distracts too badly from the entertainment of the cartoons themselves. I don't really like the FireOS and the streaming apps in them. Only TUBI, Prime, and FreeVee share what I've viewed with the FireOS so that the top level of the FireOS can organize what I'm interested in viewing. I skip between many streaming apps. I also would like it if I could log into my Amazon.com account on my main computer in a browser and attach to a facsimile of my FireTV account and create genres of all the shows I might want to watch someday at the top FireOS level, e.g., Cartoons or Cartoons by studio with subcategories of decades, TV series with subcategories of decades, comedy, detective, police, fire, medical, soap opera, and you get the ideal, not that I'd ever have the time to watch all that, it's just that people naturally like to engage in their instinct to organize in a way they find helpful. More: I have a FireTV Box on HDMI 1 and I can't get a 4K signal from it on my Hisense TV and, eg, the TUBI app lets me upgrade the resolution of shows on the Hisense TV but not on the latest generation FireTV Box. I'm not sure why, maybe I need to specifically purchase a 4K or 8K HDMI 2.1 cable to plug that FireTV Box into the Hisense TV HDMI port? Another think I don't like it I can't match the color temperature and brightness of the FireTV Box to be the same as the Hisense FireTV, which looks absolutely stupendous. More: When I am using the remote to control the FireTV Box, and not the Hisense FireTV, the remote and FireTV Box seem to struggle at times with the remote commands, ignoring them and then suddenly playing the whole queue of ignored remote commands very quickly. Frustrating, but it doesn't always happen. The Hisense FireTV itself doesn't display this behavior. I programmed my FireTV Pro Remote to control both and that was a hassle I had to repeat, ultimately ignoring that the FireTV Box failed to find the mute signal to the Hisense FireTV. It did find the on/off signal to the Hisense FireTV though. All of these bugs seem to be with the FireTVBox and not the Hisense FireTV itself. FireOS, and every other GUI OS I've ever used are somewhat slow, although usable 99% of the time. Finally, the main reason I bought this TV is because I am working on writing video games, and I wanted a testing setup where I was truly relaxed and could pay attention to how the game looks on a very big screen and whether I was enjoying playing the game. For this reason, even if I never watched shows on TV, this TV was worth the price. So overall, I've very happy with this television. It's almost like being at a cinema at times. I like the way it brings a lot of the wow back to shows like the 1960s Speed Racer that I've not seen in over 50 years, so much so that in 2 or 3 years I will probably buy another Hisense TV but with 1 to 1 direct lit mini-LED pixel dimming zones and at 100" diagonal. I'd set it on the floor as at my last real cinema visit in March 2023, I finally caught covid-19 despite all those covid-19 vaccines. That should tell you I'm pleased with the brand and quality of this TV. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2024 by J. A. Grogan

  • Beautiful picture at a great price
Size: 58-Inch
I’ve never owned a QLed TV before this one and I bought it on a whim because it was on sale for $339. At that price I couldn’t pass up upgrading my main tv to this beautiful 58 inch TV. This TV replaced my 55” TCL as my main tv. It’s beautiful and has a great picture, the remote works well, it lags a little bit more then my TCL but I read that was expected. It’s a really well built tv especially for the price. It was easy to mount but the amount of updates on the initial set up were a tad frustrating but after I got through all of them this tv really showed it was worth the wait ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2024 by Michael Matthews Michael Matthews

  • Great for the Price--works as a computer monitor too.
Size: 50-Inch
I got this for the price and the reviews I'd read. Given the price , it's a really good performer. I purchased this specifically to serve as a very large computer monitor. I don't have to wear readers while sitting at at 50 inch screen and I'm at a screen for hours. It works as such great with a modern computer. You get a giant desktop to boot--with lots of space to keep open windows etc. I tried gaming on it with an Alienware computer (not laptop)--2022 Alienware and it's been good. I'm not an avid gamer but the graphics are great. I used newer HDMI cables to insure good quality. I'd say it' would be fine with an Xbox or PS3 as well as a cheap but very respectable alternative to a stand alone monitor of this size. Professional gamers should go elsewhere for myriad reasons and simply would not choose a TV as a monitor but everyone else--you might be quite pleased given the price. I've read so much about it being an Amazon TV--true, that's the interface that's the main screen when you turn it on-- but it's as simple as pushing a few buttons, going to inputs and there's the computer as an input. I have the signal for the TV as an internet driven TV using a cable directly off my router but I did try it on WIFI (I have a very good WIFI system at home) and it was fine and generating high quality images. Yes when the screen goes to sleep, you must push the home screen button, toggle over to inputs to your computer input and wake your computer from sleep via keyboard and mouse-it's been fussy--I have to usually hit the keyboard a few times, jiggle the mouse but again we're talking 4 seconds and given the price I can live with the jiggle when that happens. Waking the computer first , then going to the inputs seems to be more reliable but this is no deal breaker by any means. I will say that the settings menus for the TV is confusing. You don't get global settings (where you it a settings button for the TV as a whole, for all things connected to the TV and apply to everything--much of your picture settings is dependent on what you are watching. So if you are watching a very high quality Netflix or Amazon Prime Show, the settings give you a broad range of options and you see the impact of those settings as you tamper for that programming. If I'm using it on my computer, I have to tweak those settings when the computer is up to insure the settings are what I want. If I am gaming (as an option) under the computer , I readjust for gaming. If I bring up any of the HD Youtube stuff for 4K--the picture is marvelous, that pristine wow picture you see on screens on display at a big box store. I do notice with scenes that are night , on Netflix or Prime, for some night scenes some issues with shadows or darkness (meaning you will see a kind of clouding abstract dark patch on the screen). You can adjust settings to get rid of this and lose some picture quality, sit further back etc. Given the price, I'd not sweat it. Other reviewers have mentioned 120hz--this is a 60hz machine (though it may do things up to 120HZ)---I've not scene specific settings that suddenly let you deal with or designate that the TV should generate 120hz. I'd welcome a post talking to that matter, be great to unlock all that but I fear on this model it's not there. Someone used the word Vivid in another post. The settings that pump out color on this machine are referred to as DYNAMIC, then there's natural, movie, standard, game PC--basically ignoring those labels--pick and choose what looks best for you and fiddle with the associated settings under those labels. There is also a custom setting for the very brave. Getting at settings is remote dependent, so that's where the action is, learn the remote. Not all remote features will work unless the content has that enabled. There's vague references to that on some of the main TV settings under the Fire settings menu on the main screen. Customer support won't tell you that and you may end up unnecessarily resetting your TV (per their directive) when in fact it's working fine. So I'd say this--if you want a cheap 4K QLED that will impress with many things, but not all, go for it with this 50 inch TV. I did for my purposes--got a great monitor, much better movie viewing in my office when I so desire and it's not really hard to operate and handle many inputs. I'd buy another HISENSE as a main TV on their upper tier. If you're thinking you're going to get OLED or some competitors quality at a steal--not quite but very close . ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2022 by Living Wage Advocate

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