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There are 6 reviews for this product.
I purchased this tv a few days ago not from Amazon I had been looking for a cheap large plasma. I found this for less than £400. The picture is sharp and clear. It sits nicely in the corner of the room where my old tv was. Warning if you wish to hang on the wall it is very heavy!!
The sound is great for a tv although at times I find it quite bassy. I only have standard equipment Sky and dvd player. Great picture. Plugged in My Xbox 360 and it displays in 480p very clear picture and I played a Star Wars Dvd this displayed at 540p.
Am i happy with this purchase, you bet it was worth shopping around and although not full HD I couldnt really tell the difference.
John
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 19May2009 | | | I bought this model in January for £650 from John Lewis. Now Amazon are showing it at £550 and in fairness I do not feel shortchanged because, simply put, this TV is superb. Looks and feels top quality, and picture is top notch especially so with Sony Blu-Ray hooked-up. Id recommend this to anyone (and have many times!). A steal.
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 16Apr2008 | | | I bought this tv for my family as a present for christmas, and was suprised to find how good this tv is for the price.
I looked at it in the shops first to ensure that the quality is good, and its better than some of the much more expensive 42` plasmas made by other companies. Overall, the picture quality is excellent, especially with the new upscaling dvd player I also bought from amazon.
I would agree with the other reviews that the only down fall is the freeview, its not that bad, but I have seen better. This doesnt really affect us though as we have sky and rarely use the built in freeview.
Looks very good, has great picture, is HD ready and the sound is also very good. I would definatley reccomend this tv to others for its quality for price.
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 30Dec2007 | | | I bought this TV a couple of weeks ago, and I am still blown away by the quality of the picture and the general all round class of it. Have Sky HD and watching sport on this screen has reminded both me and my husband of courting days spent at Anfield.
I went for this set because it was a reasonably priced model from a good manufacturer and I think it is one of the wisest buying decisions I have made in a long time.
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 24Dec2007 | | | Low-end plasma screens arent plentiful and when my 32` Sharp CRT packed in I had to do some quick research to determine that for less than £700 for a plasma I had two choices: this Philips or the Hitachi P42H01.
For best comparison clearly viewing the set in action used to be the way to go, but since the shops tend not to know how to calibrate these things or use dodgy aerial connections, I dont see value in that any more. Instead I decided to review feature sets like screen brightness and resolution and inputs. Usability is also important to me so I checked out the owners manuals which you can download from manufacturer websites -- also helps to double-check features because not all online resellers get the facts right.
I went for the Philips because the screen is brighter level and vertical resolution are better, but the tradeoff is that the remote isnt as nicely laid out, there arent as many outputs and the freeview tuner isnt as user friendly.
I bought it as a monitor focusing on DVD viewing and it really excels. Invest in DVD Video Essentials to help calibrate it with a progressive scan DVD player (Philips has one for under £40) and you wont see the need for HD-DVD or Blu-Ray, it really is a nice picture with a quality source.
The video modes for switching screen resolution are plentiful, so if you want to watch 4:3 material like old tv programmes but dont want big grey bars theres a 14:9 setting and a 16:9 zoomed setting in addition to anamorphic 16:9 and the generic WIDESCREEN -- not really sure of the difference between the last two -- in addition to yet another zoom mode that allows the picture to be moved around.
Audio is not super with the built-in speakers. Unfortunately the only audio output options are via Headphone socket or the second SCART port (not very well documented except via pictures showing a maze of lines connecting various kit to the tv every which way. I had to write Philips tech support to confirm this) which automatically sends audio out. I use a SCART to dual-phono plug to connect the telly to my receiver and I have a multi-RGB SCART switchbox from Maplin to address the limitations of only having one RGB SCART for input.
Component/RGB connections are available for connecting a progressive scan DVD player and theres also separate S-Video and composite video and phono connectors for ad hoc connection of camcorders. Outside of these four connection methods you have two HDMI inputs which are HDCP-enabled so you can connect a PS3 or HD-DVD or whatever. You can also attach a computer equipped with a digital DVI output using a DVI-HDMI cable. The tv supports up to 1024x768 resolution at 60Hz when used as a computer display. Any computer issued in the last few years should have a DVI output that will automatically switch from analogue to digital out -- at least Macs do...older computer users or those only equipped with a VGA output are out of luck -- the Hitachi has a VGA connector, so check out that set if you require this.
So, no separate audio out (again the Hitachi has audio output, in fact I think it has analogue and digital via Co-ax), but the real letdown was the freeview tuner; not because its bad, but because the interface isnt as good as the Goodmans freeview box I already had. Setup is easy and I could find all the channels nicely. Signal strength to my lower-ground flat isnt great so I use a powered signal amplifier (Maplins again) which compensates very well and ensures I can pick up all the channels. The problem comes with the programme guide. The Goodmans DB6 freeview box I have does a picture in picture on the programme guide so I can see the current channel as well as a description of the programmes in the list as I scroll through them. The Philips programme guide is static: no video and no audio, so if you want to see whats on next you need to stop watching your current programme and go into a menu with a bunch of programme names. To see a description requires pressing an additional button. A real downgrade so guess what, RGB switchbox port 1 has the Goodmans freeview box attached and I dont use the built-in freeview tuner at all. It means four remotes instead of three, but for ease-of-use its the choice I made.
Why four stars? Its a great picture and I got it for that. I already had the other freeview box, so Im not out any extra dosh, but had I not had the freeview experience already I probably wouldnt know the difference or let it affect my purchase.
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 28Sep2007 | | | I have purchased this TV (Not from Amazon) the headphone socket does not work and as the TV is out of stock I will have to wait for some weeks for an exchange. The TV gets very hot when it is on. The picture is very good. The sound is o.k but not brilliant.
Reviewed by: Amazon Reviewer Rating: Date Reviewed: 18Sep2007 | | |
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