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Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV

Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV

513F2XWX59L

  • Analog VGA (15 pin D-Sub), Digital (DVI-D), Composite (BNC), S-Video
  • Viewable Image Size: 42″
  • Resolution 852 x 480 Native
  • 4000 to 1 Contrast Ratio
  • Environments: PC and Mac compatible

42″ Proline Plasma Display (Base Not Included). Does not include tunerThis 16:9 widescreen plasma set a bright display that will look good in any room, on any wall or on any surface. It comes standard with both basic video and PC inputs and is easily expandable to accommodate a variety of different sources. Image
Panasonic’s Multi-Facet Asymmetrical Configuration Hyper-Pixel (MACH) panel features new materials and technology that improves the light-emitting efficiency and intensity of their plasma screens. The result is a deeper contrast ratio (up to 3,000:1 in dark areas), 2,048 shades of gradation (4,096 shades via HDMI or DVI connection and optional accessory board),3.62 billion full-time displayable colors. It is compatible with a whole host of HD signals, from 1080i to 480p. The TH-42PWD8UK also uses a host of Panasonic image improving features. Adaptive Gain Control raises contrast while suppressing noise by detecting and boosting only the image edges. Motion Picture Noise

Rating: 4 5 (out of 10 reviews)

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List Price: $ 1,799.99

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Comments

4 comments

    Rich Manalang

    October 18, 2010

    Review by Rich Manalang for Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV
    Rating:
    This is our first plasma/flat screen tv. It’s a big move up from our 27″ tube. We have a basic set up… Tivo hooked up via s-video and a progressive scan DVD via component video. This product is a display only. It doesn’t have a built in tv tuner and so we use our Tivo for that. The picture quality of the Tivo on this display is marginal, but still better than what we used to have… and from 12′-15′ back, you probably won’t notice the difference from an HD display. The DVD output, on the other hand, is excellent. The detail, color, and realism is amazing. Save yourself up to $1000 and go with the EDTV… I think it’s just as good as HD for most people.

    D. Wien

    October 18, 2010

    Review by D. Wien for Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV
    Rating:
    After you replaced the first one because of breakage, I found the replacement to be wonderful. I hooked it up and found the plasma display to be all that you claimed.

    HD resolution is perfectly fine on this EDTV as long as you watch it from at least 8 feet away from the screen.

    The multiple connections make it easy for a person to hook up all the peripherals.

    It doesn’t make sense to spend the extra money on a true HD set when this one produces such a clear, crisp picture.

    S. Haley

    October 18, 2010

    Review by S. Haley for Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV
    Rating:
    The price of this tv is 500-800 dollars less than the nearest true HD 42″ plasma tv. The picture is awesome in progressive DVD. Sattelite tv is good to very good. If you watch DVD movies often, you will love this tv. The only bad thing I can say about this tv is that it should come with a HDMI connection, but for 130-150 dollars you can install one in the empty input. I am glad Panasonic builds a great EDTV for those of us who can’t afford a HDTV.

    Joshua G. Feldman

    October 18, 2010

    Review by Joshua G. Feldman for Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK 42-Inch Plasma EDTV
    Rating:
    I bought the TH-42PWD8UK after exhaustive research and dozens of showroom screenings. To be blunt, these Panasonics have (both the HDs and EDs), by far, the best picture you can have in your home and I’m delirously happy with it. There are a bunch of caveats and issues, though. The flat screen TV decision cuts across a mess of issues:

    1) Plasma versus LCD. LCDs look better in the average showroom because they have smaller pixels (finer grained picture) and brighter backlighting. Plasma’s hidden strength is their rich blacks and more vivid colors. In real life you sit back 8 feet or so from the screen – so the pixel size issue disappears. The brightness issue disappears in real life too – where I, like most folks, do most of my viewing in evening or night hours in a partially lit room. Plasma’s strengths in dense blacks and vivid colors equates to a greater image dynamics – more akin to film than regular television. Once you start to spot it, LCDs look a bit washed out by comparison. Plasma’s vividness can be a dual edge sword. Sometimes flesh tones can look too pink. Panasonic gets this right – better than most other plasma screens. Rear projection and front projector units can’t compete for vivid picture or image contrast (not to mention angle of view – the big drawback of rear projection BTW).

    2) HDTV versus EDTV. HD has higher resolution – but only HD broadcasts can take advantage of it. All the rest of the content you throw at it (DVDs, regular TV broadcasts) must be upsampled. (EDTVs have to upsample regular broadcasts too BTW). Resampling can introduce artifacts (blocky shapes). The quality of resampled images varies quite a bit among different manufacturers and is the reason why you shouldn’t necessarily go cheap. EDTV is designed to have the same resolution as DVD – and DVDs look amazing on the 42PWD8UK. HDTVs can actually look inferior to EDTVs on DVDs and regular broadcasts because of the upsampling issue. HD content looks pretty darned good on the 42PWD8UK too – even though it must be downsampled. I spent a good long time looking at an HD demo on the HD and ED models of this monitor and found the difference surprising subtle. I haven’t regretted the decision so far. Obviously the only major reason to go with HD is that you have HD channels on cable or satellite, and plan to go to blue-ray or HD DVD soon. If these moves are not immenent for you – then don’t pay extra for HD. By the time HD fully penetrates, prices will have dropped a lot and it will be close to time for a new TV anyway.

    3) Consumer versus Commercial line. The 42PWD8UK is from Panasonic’s commercial line. That’s why it is sold without a stand, speakers, and without a tuner (and has such a low price). Stand or wall mount is your choice – but you must budget to buy one or the other. I found a Panasonic brand stand for $185 and it’s great. Most folks have external cable or satellite boxes so the internal tuner you buy with the consumer line model is wasted money. The fact that HDMI interface is a cost added option is a non-issue with EDTV – since you will not benefit from the higher resolution of that interface. The 42PWD8UK comes with three inputs standard: BNC coax digital composite, Component Video (the three R-G-B cables), and computer SVGA. Trust me – Component Video is good enough. The inclusion of SVGA is awesome too – for those who have a computer in their home entertainment system. As for speakers – a big screen like this screams out for a good surround receiver and 5.1 (or 6.1 or 7.1) channel audio speakers. If you don’t invest the extra $500-$1000 that a decent 5.1-7.1 audio setup will run you you are really cheating yourself. Immersive audio is hugely important in home theater and will really augment the great picture you’ll get with the 42PWD8UK. Given that you own your own home theater audio setup – or will be derelict if you don’t get one – the issue of the 42PWD8UK not including speakers is irrelevent.

    4) Panasonic versus the other guys. Short and sweet – there’s no better picture at anywhere near the price. At the high end only Hitachi and Pioneer compete. Interesting offerings like HP end up just being rebranded Panasonics. Cheaper units like Philips (much as I normally like their stuff) look too pink on flesh tones and have inferior black detail. Don’t get a cheaper HDTV just because it’s HD! The resolution difference is negligible compared to overall image quality. Image quality is where the 42PWD8UK rules – and isn’t that really the bottom line here?

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