📺 Elevate your binge game with Roku’s 4K brilliance and voice-powered ease!
The Roku Select Series 43-Inch Smart TV delivers a premium 4K HDR10+ viewing experience with automatic brightness adjustment and a bezel-less design. Powered by Roku’s intuitive platform, it offers seamless streaming with fast Wi-Fi, a customizable home screen, and an enhanced voice remote featuring headphone mode and lost remote finder. Perfect for professionals seeking effortless entertainment and vibrant visuals in a sleek package.
Brand Name | Roku |
Item Weight | 19.96 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 8.7 x 37.9 x 24.4 inches |
Item model number | 43R4A5R |
Color Name | Black |
Special Features | Bezel-Less Design, HDR10+, Voice Remote |
Speaker Type | Built-In |
Standing screen display size | 43 Inches |
Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
Wattage | 118 |
L**E
Great tv
Great value for money. Ordered this tv for my bedroom and so far it has been great. I’ve had no issues. Light weight and easy to set up. Picture quality has been great. Easy to connect to my WiFi. I really like the Roku app so far as all the reviews I read really seemed to like everything about it overall and I have to agree. You can add all the apps you want, no lagging issues at this time and durability has been good.
R**S
Best TV I have owned!
So far (2025/07/07) this TV has been great. You just turn it on and watch TV. There are no extra steps, incantations, or gyrations you have to go through just to get it to work like you do with a TV contaminated with android. It was very easy to configure and connect to internet. I would recommend this TV if you are looking for one that is at a good price and is about as close to a dumb TV as you can get without having to pay so much for a dumb TV. Roku has done a great thing here for all of humanity!
J**Y
Pound for pound Roku has the best entertainment solutions at low end cost.
If you went to Target, Walmart or even Amazon, you could find several 42" and up sized HD4K screens from all the big names. SONY, LCM, Panasonic etc. etc. etc.And you would pay out the nose for those screens. And I'm sure they all are fine products. But they all have the same thing in common.1. Expensive. Ranging anywhere between $450 to $1,250. Depending on size and features. Obviously companies like SONY and Panasonic who have built a name for themselves as producers of high end electronics, have set their sale price quite high. And worst of all somehow can justify that high price with the quality of their product. But then there's....2. Ease of use. The big brands while make big beautiful screens, they also make quite possibly the most complicated ones to use. Figuring out how to navigate through all the different options for aspect ratio, sound, color, HD etc. is mind boiling. By the midway point you feel like you need a PhD to figure out everything. And more then likely also need an interpreter to read the instructions for how to use the remote. Not to mention hiring someone to professionally install for you after you realize you haven't a clue what you are doing. So now your out of even more money.The Roku screens on the other side are absolute dreams.1. They cost so little. I bought a 50" HD 4K screen for $249.99 . It arrived by a professional delivery driver from Amazon. The packaging was very secure. Complete instructions in how to unpack, setup and plug in were in English and also had pictures to explain the process.2. Ease of use. I plugged my TV in and turned it on. As it searched for my home WiFi, I put the batteries in the remote. The remote then automatically links itself to the TV. And boom, I'm done.That's it. The TV is like HD for dummies. Basically it's just plug in and enjoy. My remote also has a microphone on it so I can simply push the mic button and say what I want and it finds it.It also has an earphone jack so I can plug in a headset and can enjoy what program it want to watch without disturbing others who don't want to hear what I'm watching while they've doing other things in the house. Plus there's an app you can download that links a remote to your phone or tablet so you can use them to select what you want to watch or listen to. That's right, you can Bluetooth your TV through your phone or tablet and wirelessly listen through Bluetooth headphones or speakers. There's no need for a degree in HD technology to figure out how to do that.Roku makes the easiest to use and navigate screens on the market. Not to mention the cheapest (lowest priced models) in comparison to everything else out there.You'd be a fool to buy anything else!!!!
D**E
Very impressive, but no bluetooth
Very impressed so far. Set up was a breeze--just took my laptop into the room and used it to sign into my Roku account then activated the TV. Despite what I read, the audio is very good for built-in speakers and would easily suffice if you didn't want a soundbar/external audio source. Works seamlessly with a Bluray player. Amazon Prime plays flawlessly. The picture is excellent. Almost wish I'd bought the next size up, but I'm going to have to get used to this 55" before doing that. And the price can't be beat--I paid $249.99 but I see it's gone up slightly. I'd put this up against any $1,000 TV out there.EDIT: If you're planning on using bluetooth, forget it. Even though the "Compare With Similar Items" shows the TV has bluetooth, it does not.
K**R
GREAT PICTURE AND SOUND, ONCE WE ADDED THE SOUND BAR
Nice TV, great picture, and great price, once you accept becoming one with the ROKU universe. Not sure what use it will be if ROKU ever goes away. IF you aren't already a Roku person, prepare for extended fun subscribing to all the dozens and dozens of network apps, most of which you probably never heard of. Some just want your info, and too many want your credit card number. We connected to the few we already subscribe to, (Netflix, Amazon, etc,) and passed on most of the rest.Connecting to the HDMI ports was pretty simple. On bootup, the opening screen clearly shows where to click to connect to the 4 HDMI ports and Video ports so our CABLE, COMPUTER, BLURAY and VCR are all clearly displayed and easily connected.The sound was mediocre at best when relying on the rear-facing internal speakers, but that's typical of most flat screen TVs. We added one of their sound bars that seamlessly integrates with the TV, via WiFi, meaning there is not now an additional remote for the sound bar. Seamlessly, that is, until it isn't. A few days back, something upgraded ? in the background and, Poof, no sound. TV didn't even acknowledge the soundbar existed, though it sits directly in front of the TV. Through 15 minutes of poking around, rebooting everything, including the router, with zero luck, I spotted a tiny, almost hidden button on the rear of the soundbar. RESET. Pushed and held it for several seconds and the TV rediscovered the soundbar, via the WIFI, and I was able to reconfigure it.So far, the biggest downer is, we use a Spectrum cable box, and we have been able to pair its remote with every other TV we have, including the one this is replacing. Except this one. Spectrum publishes a list of hundreds of manufacturers and models, with codes you can input into the Spectrum remote so it knows how to spit out your TV specific infrared codes to allow control of the TV Power and volume functions. Despite a full day of playing with this, there are NO Roku codes in Spectrum's printout, and hours online, digging up arcane codes and tricks and witchcraft have yielded nada. Zero luck. Life is now a two-fisted remote process. Oh, and one other bit of weird. When trying to program the remotes I found the soundbar, sitting in front of the TV, blocks the IR receiver for the TV. Its a half-inch too tall. Great design fellas.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago