LG 26LZ5RV review

The latest fashion sweeping the TV catwalks this season

TechRadar Verdict

Not without its flaws, but a handy and reasonably affordable secondary set

Pros

  • +

    Design

  • +

    detail

Cons

  • -

    Audio

  • -

    unrealistic colours

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Televisions with built-in DVD decks seem to be right back in fashion at the moment and LG isn't a company to miss a trend.The idea hasn't really managed to get a firm grip on the mass market yet, though, so this 26in analogue set will be looking to strike a blow for one-box, do-it-all movie machines.

The 26LX5RV isn't going to be first on anyone's list of significant aesthetic breakthroughs,but the designers have done an efficient job of creating a set that will blend smoothly into any room.It's more angular than many and a subtle piece of shading on a transparent strip between screen and stand creates a 'floating' effect that lifts it above the ordinary. It's also pulled off that Sony-favoured trick where its standby LED appears to be suspended in clear plastic, although some light spillage underneath rather scuppers the illusion.A pleasant enough spectacle overall, though.

The picture is serviceable, without ever suggesting that this set has the chops to convince properly as the mainstay of any serious home movie system. Broadcast pictures are pretty lively,but there isn't much consistency from channel to channel.Where Andrew Neil on the Daily Politics is the colour of re-formed ham,the cast of Home & Away seems to have been hewn from terracotta.This could be the source rather than the screen,but neither extreme is particularly lifelike. It's fairly dynamic, though, and simpler, less nuanced stuff like cartoons is punchy and vivid in comparison.

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