With HD-ready TV prices hitting rock bottom, it was only a matter of time before Full HD TVs did the same. You can now find largescreen 1080p sets for well under a grand, and one of the leading protagonists in this price plummet is Evesham, whose £650 Alqemi VX set boasts the sort of spec sheet usually found on much pricier TVs.
Inevitably, the design isn’t too swanky, but the black frame and side-mounted speakers are far from offensive with a predictably slim profile.
Connect whore
The generous connections panel can house a wide array of HD and SD kit. There are two HDMI sockets, component video input and two Scarts, both of which accept RGB signals. These are joined by a subwoofer output for beefing up bass output.
Elsewhere, features are thin on the ground. There’s an onboard Freeview tuner with all the usual digital gubbins like text and a well designed 7-day EPG, and a picture-in-picture mode – but you won’t find any high-powered processing. The more ecologically minded will be pleased to learn that it consumes just 0.96W in standby.
Certain elements of the operating system are counter intuitive, such as the two similar-looking control dials on the remote and the double-function keys, but some are downright infuriating, like the tiny PC monitor style menus and having to toggle through every AV input to find the right one. But at least the set is responsive and digital channels change with minimum delay.
You can, with extensive twiddling of the settings, achieve decent picture quality, but the Alqemi VX exhibits some fundamental flaws that stop us hailing it as the bargain of the century.
Strong, realistic type
Starting with the positive, the set’s colour reproduction is strong and realistic. Flicking through the daytime Freeview schedules reveals a uniformly competent handling of bold, brash colours and skin tones.
Also impressive is the amount of detail packed into the picture. Running a 1080p signal from a Xbox 360 Elite console, the Alqemi’s pixel-mapping talent allows it to pick out every piece of fine detail from Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, resulting in super-sharp images that will make an HD virgin’s jaw hit the floor.

