Samsung PS-42P7HD review

Affordable plasma stakes its claim

The PS-42P7HD has an ultra-glossy, minimalistic black bezel/stand and sleek, angled, silver strip along the bottom edge

TechRadar Verdict

A great value choice that brings together most of plasma's strong points in one package

Pros

  • +

    Stylish

    Good connectivity

    Excellent pictures

    Good value

Cons

  • -

    Average sound

    Colours can look unnatural

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Plasma screen makers have spent thousands of pounds promoting the benefits of the technology (better blacks and superior motion resolution).

Korean flat panel king Samsung aggressively supports both LCD and plasma, so it's an intriguing prospect to compare the PS-42P7HD with the company's 40-inch LCDs - because as LCD screen sizes grow larger, plasma has had to work harder to earn its corn.

Keeping the noise down

Feeding the 42P7HD a variety of HD and standard-def sources produces a generally likeable performance. Particularly impressive are its noiseless pictures. Moving objects, like footballers during both standard- and high-definition football matches, appear free of dotting noise.

What's more, camera pans showed no sign of the fuzzing and blur witnessed on comparably-sized LCDs. MPEG noise in general is noticeable only by its absence. Black level is also rather good. The screen claims an impressive contrast ratio of 10000:1 (actually measured by our Tech Lab as a reasonable 420:1).

This is borne out by some striking, deep blacks practically devoid of the grey or blue overtones of other LCD TVs. This nicely adds tension during the dark factory level of Gears of War on the Xbox 360. The darkness makes the locations feel more convincing and threatening.

Also very good is the 42P7HD's sharpness. The scrap around Vernita Green's house in Kill Bill Volume 1, (from Sky HD) for instance, is gorgeously clear and detailed. The quality of the Smooth Motion Driver is such that even the very fast action doesn't lead to any obvious sharpness-reducing processing artefacts.

Minor quibbles

There are a couple of areas where the 42P7HD falls short of admittedly more expensive PDPs from Pioneer and Panasonic. First, the deep black level lacks greyscale subtlety. I also noted that colours during SD viewing occasionally look unnatural, with an orangey look to reds and flesh tones, and a greenish tone to peak whites.

But these traits are either small or sporadic enough not to count as serious black marks on a great picture.

Sonically, the TV is simply functional. It continues Samsung's current penchant for 'hiding' down firing speakers along the bottom edge of the screen, but, as usual this leads to a soundstage which sounds congested and one-dimensional.

Plasma is alive and well in the form of the PS-42P7HD. Its picture quality is not only better than you've any right to expect for £1,500, but also better for home cinema viewing than the brand's similarly-sized LCD products. A great value choice.

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