LG Infinia 60PZ750 60-Inch 1080p 600 Hz Active 3D THX Certified Plasma HDTV with Smart TV
- Bring your content alive with full 1080p HD 3D technology
- THX 3D Display certified ensuring you’re bringing an uncompromised 3D HD experience home
- Smart TV allows you to access limitless content, thousands of movies, customizable apps, videos and the best of the web all organized in a simple to use interface
- Incredibly high contrast ratio of 10,000,000:1 delivers incredibly vibrant colors and deeper and darker blacks, Warranty – 1 year labor and parts (2 years panel)
- The 600Hz Sub Field Driving virtually eliminates motion blur
Don’t apologize for wanting everything from a TV. Get it and a lot more, with the 60PZ750 3D 1080p Plasma TV from LG. Feast your eyes on a THX-certified 3D picture that will bring you your entertainment like never before. Enjoy deeper blacks that bring the picture to life with the TruBlack Filter and get so much more from so much less with the stylishly slim Infinia design.
3D Technology ChecklistThis product is 3D-related. To help you get a great 3D experience, use the checklist below to ensure you have everything you need. 3D viewing requires:A Display
First, you’ll need a 3D-ready display–whether it’s a 3D HDTV, 3D projector, or 3D computer monitor. These displays have more processing power than standard 2D models for displaying 3D images in rapid succession. A Source
Your display may be ready for 3D playback, but you’ll still need a device to read 3D content. This can be a cable box with a subscription to a 3D channel, a 3D Blu-ray Disc player, or a PlayStation 3 syst
List Price: $ 1,999.99
Price: $ 1,999.99
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Comments
One comment
Vynny “Vynrod”
June 11, 2012
3D TV done right,
My previous TV was a three-year old Panasonic HDTV 50″ plasma and so I’m able to review this TV with some experience with another set that had similar specifications. I wasn’t expecting massive leaps in image quality and merely purchased this TV because of the low price it was at and the fact that I wanted the 3D experience.
I have to say however that once tweaked, this set is leaps and bounds beyond my older TV. The image is clearer and is much brighter. Of course as I said you have to tweak it to get that perfect image and by far in a way the most essential tweak is to switch off the terrible energy saving option that infects this television. The theory is this ‘intelligently’ dims areas of the unneeded sections of the screen to save power since plasmas draw a lot of juice. The reality, however, is everything looks dirty and dim even at 100% brightness. In fact with the energy saving setting on, the more I tweaked things, the dimmer the TV seemed to get. Thankfully it’s just a quick disable of this option and retina-burning brightness is the wonderful result. Just how I like it.
Once I was satisfied with the image settings I immediately played the IMAX ‘Ultimate Wave Tahiti’ 3D blu ray to stretch its legs. And I was blown away. Everything looked so clear yet… in 3D! And I love the fact that the menu options are also in 3D meaning that tweaking the depth settings whilst playing a 3D movie is extremely easy (and quite effectively bizarre).
Now there’s a lot of features on this set – youtube, web browser, vudu, games, apps and so on and I’ve yet to try any of them. This is due to the fact that this ‘wifi ready’ set doesn’t have wifi; you have to buy the LG AN-WF100 Wi-Fi USB Adaptor or use a cat5 cable. I almost dinged the overall rating stars because of this. Even sub-$100 gadgets like apple TV has wifi built in. I decided against the ding and have ordered the dongle but boy is it frustrating to spend four figures on a set up only to find you’re missing a 1 inch long peripheral that cost $20 or so. This also means I haven’t had chance to try the supplied extra mouse pointer wii-like remote controller (you also get a nice light-up normal remote) although it does look interesting.
Sound is also unused in my set up as I have a 7.1 receiver. Usually sound on these sets is passable but nothing to write home about – I can’t imagine this set pumps out huge bass because it’s so thin, but perhaps the speakers are in the base or something. In all honestly if you’re getting this TV then you probably already have equipment that sounds better than the in built speakers though.
Almost certainly due to the high brightness that I have this set I do notice a lot of inherent memory. This is often thought to be burn-in on plasmas and I read in another review for this plasma TV that they were whitewashing the set every night to rectify it. Please don’t do this! Temporary image retention is normal for a plasma and it self corrects itself fairly quickly once you start watching something else. This set ‘suffers’ from it no more than any other plasma that I’ve seen and I just wanted to put that out there in case you bought it and thought you’d ruined it with some burn in.
So what we have here is a utterly stunning TV that’s got everything you need. It’s ten steps ahead of my three year old plasma in all respects plus it’s 70lbs lighter. I cannot recommend this TV highly enough regardless of whether you’re into the 3D thing. What a great set.
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