Toshiba 43UL2063DB Dolby Vision 4K TV review
The TV doesn’t wear its charm on its sleeve, though. Its bodywork is pretty much all plastic, and it's chunky around the back in classic budget TV style. Yet connectivity is better than expected, with three HDMI inputs and two USB ports, plus even a VGA socket for people with PCs too old-school for HDMI.
The 43UL2063DB doesn’t join some other Toshiba TVs in using the Android TV OS. From an interface perspective I don’t mind this, because the proprietary UI here is actually tidier and easier to follow. But you do pay a price in app terms – while the 43UL2063DB carries Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube, Rakuten and Freeview Play, there’s no sign of Apple TV, Disney+ or Now TV.
Betting on black
This budget screen's picture quality is a pleasant surprise, especially when it comes
to contrast. Inevitably for a low-tier TV, brightness is limited; around 330 nits in Natural mode, and 300 nits in Cinema mode (on a white HDR window covering 10 per cent of the screen). However, the set gets more impact from this brightness than most, thanks to a black level that goes deep and avoids low-contrast greyness better than some TVs costing twice as much.
This allows the moon approach sequence in First Man (4K BD) to be conveyed with a genuine sense of an HDR-enhanced light range.
Provided you avoid Toshiba's rather odd-looking Cinema picture preset, these good black levels don’t come at the expense of too much lost shadow detail, either. And they contribute to a decently rich, natural palette, capable of injecting impressive vibrancy into splashes of primary colour. At the same time, tones avoid oversaturation and skin tones have enough blend subtlety in them to stop people looking like mannequins (particularly with bright Dolby Vision scenes).
The 43UL2063DB’s 4K images aren’t forensically detailed, but they’re crisp enough to sell the format's advantages. What’s more, unlike many budget sets, the picture doesn’t descend into a blurry mess when there’s motion to contend with. Toshiba even provides a ‘Tru Flow’ motion processor, but you don’t really need it. In fact, it arguably makes the picture look worse overall. Just leave it off.
Upscaling of HD sources is respectable, if not as rich in added detail as the efforts you’d expect to see from a good mid-range model. It’s an okay gaming display, too, offering a speedy 17.2ms of input lag in its Game mode.
Crash bang, no wallop
Regarding audio, First Man’s dramatic and intense opening ‘crash’ sequence enjoys
more volume, dialogue clarity and mid-range headroom than expected, and while bass is pretty limited, that at least means there's no sense of the soundstage becoming swamped and murky.
I did experience a bug a couple of times where the sound would glitch momentarily, and then run out of sync with a Blu-ray's image unless the film was paused and restarted. Also in the negative column, dark Dolby Vision scenes exhibited some strangely ‘basic’ colour rendering.
No TV as affordable as the 43UL2063DB, however, will be all plain sailing. The best you can hope for is that a budget set knows how to manage and mitigate is limitations – and in that respect this Toshiba is a solid effort.
HCC Verdict
Toshiba 43UL2063DB, £350 www.toshiba.co.uk
Rating: 4/5
We say: While it can’t completely hide its entry-level nature, the 43UL2063DB’s pictures and sound are a cut above the budget TV norm.
SPECIFICATIONS
4K: Yes. 3,840 x 2,160
HDR: Yes. HDR10; HLG; Dolby Vision
TUNER: Yes.
Freeview HD
CONNECTIONS: 3 x HDMI inputs (with up to 4K 60Hz support); 2 x USBs; RF input; VGA input; optical digital audio output
SOUND (CLAIMED): 2 x 10W
BRIGHTNESS (CLAIMED): N/A CONTRAST RATIO (CLAIMED):
N/ADIMENSIONS (OFF STAND): 973(w) x 620(h) x 234(d)mm WEIGHT (OFF STAND): 7.5kg
Features: Built-in Wi-Fi; USB multimedia playback; Tru Flow motion processor; proprietary smart interface; Alexa voice recognition support via external listening devices; Google Assistant voice support built in; Bluetooth
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