Welcome to the future. In one audacious move, this 52in beauty vanquishes the two thorns in LCD's side – resolution loss over moving objects, and grey-looking dark areas. Samsung's LED debut, the LE52F96BD, is here – and it's brown trousers time for plasma.
But how does the LE52F96BD achieve this miracle? This innovative giant does away with established LCD thinking by chucking away the old single backlight and replacing it with an array of individually controllable LED light sources.
This enables it to also completely deactivate lights in dark parts of the picture, thus revolutionising black level response.
Samsung's LCD stunner
Samsung claims an unbelievable contrast ratio of 50,000:1 for the LE52F96BD. Compare this with the 'mere' 20,000:1 of Pioneer's ground breaking Kuro plasma TVs, and you can see how exciting LED technology has the potential to be.
It's tempting to dive straight in and discover just how much of a difference LED's UK debut makes to picture quality, but there are a few other basics we need to cover first. For starters, it looks amazing; utterly resplendent in black.
The connections are on the money too. Three v1.3 HDMIs (meaning they're compatible with the Deep Colour HD format) lead the charge, joined by component video input, PC connectivity and a USB2.0 jack for MP3/JPEG playback.
The LED backlighting is far from the only feature for boosting picture quality. Samsung's Digital Natural Image engine is included for improving colour tones and saturations, motion handling, black levels and detail, as is Movie Plus for interpolating extra frames into the picture in a bid to further boost motion handling.
Vibrant pictures
Unleashed on a Blu-ray disc of Pirates of the Caribbean, it's swiftly apparent that LED is not only here to stay, but might also one day become the only LCD lighting system.
Black level response is astonishing: we've never seen such rich, credible blacks from an LCD TV during the Black Pearl's night-time assault. Although we have doubts about the real-world reliability of the 50,000:1 contrast ratio claim, it's true to say that there's practically zero greyness to be seen. This LCD TV gets mightily close to the subterranean black level delights of Pioneer's Kuro plasmas – some accolade.

