Samsung LE55A956D review

With its Series 9 sets, Samsung claims to have taken LCD TV technology to another level

Samsung
Samsung uses LED backlighting to give this LCD TV pronounced black levels and amazing contrast

TechRadar Verdict

A gorgeous TV with some truly inspirational features

Pros

  • +

    Black level

  • +

    Crisp and detailed HD images

  • +

    WISELINK Pro-DLNA is an exceptional addition

Cons

  • -

    Mighty footprint in bezel and depth terms

  • -

    Pictures need tweaking

  • -

    SD pictures can look flat

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It's been a good few months for high-performance TVs.

And now we've got our hands on the Korean company's 55in Series 9 LCD TV – a flagship screen with no shortage of innovative features.

Looks-wise, this flatscreen is certainly different to the Samsung's regular Crystal Designed wares – there's no splash of red. This style is monikered 'Platinum Black', although – subtle mottling aside – it's just black, really.

The larger the screen, the more pronounced and effective the localised dimming seems. Take Stardust on HD DVD, and specifically Michelle Pfieffer in a black robe hamming it up for the camera: her robe seamlessly blended into the top and bottom-ranged black bars, which, in turn, blended into the bezel. It was a marriage of the kind of deep, unsullied blacks atypical of an LCD TV that's actually switched on.

It's plasma-esque in its mastery.Of course, with deep blacks come vibrant colours. With good HD material an almost three-dimensional image is achieved. SD pictures are less exciting and can look somewhat flat.

My advice? Switch it onto 'Medium' for normal TV and some standard-definition DVD viewing, and 'off' for any hi-def shenanigans, including games.

'Sports', 'Cinema' and 'Game' each aim to fine-tune the picture settings for their specifi c tasks but, to be frank, they're useless. Calibrate the telly yourself to your own personal preference and stick with it.

The same goes for the audio, which offers a similar range of adjustable presets. There are fi ve options you can choose from (in addition to turning SRS TruSurround XT on or off) but I feel you'd be best off fiddling with the in-built equalizer yourself.

Better still, leave it and take the audio from the included optical digital audio output into a dedicated system (Samsung's own HT-X715 all-in one would be a good match stylistically). That's not to say the two 15W speakers are useless – they're quite functional actually – but a serious flatscreen like this deserves more support.

There's more to this 55in Series 9 than just video and audio performance. As it's Samsung's top-of-the-range model, it's been lavished with most all of the company's TV innovations, each of which are generally beneficial to those who like to dabble and muck-about with gadgetry.

Like some of its stablemates, the 956 features WISELINK Pro. This allows you to play DivX (and related) video files, JPEGs and MP3s on the TV via a USB stick. However, unlike the Series 7 equivalent, this set can also stream the same content from a PC over a network.

Once hooked up to your router via the LAN port on the back, or the included USB wi-fi dongle, the DLNA-compliant TV can access music, video and picture files. You might need to install proprietary software on the target computer, but afterwards hookup is a doddle. HD content won't run smoothly using the wireless option, but it's fine through a hard-wired connection, and everything else is trouble-free with both. I can't stress enough how pleasing this feature is.

Another feature that's interesting, but won't wow the world, is the Content Library. Stored on the TV itself is a host of recipes, simple games, fitness instructions and kids' pastimes. Like InfoLive, it's a gimmick that will become better realised further down the line (on later models) but is barely more than a distraction at present.

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