Panasonic TX-37LZD81 review

If 37in is as big as you want, this Freesat-ready model excels

Panasonic TX-37LZD81
The Panasonic TX-37LZD81 has a pretty wide footprint, and its thick bezel is topped off, predictably, with a piano black finish

TechRadar Verdict

Panasonic dishes up an impressive sub-£1,000 satellite and terrestrial combo. All that's missing from the mix is a Sky tuner

Pros

  • +

    Freesat HD

  • +

    Freeview and analogue tuners

  • +

    Full HD

Cons

  • -

    Just one favourites list

  • -

    Surround modes not great

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you're buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Until the second wave of manufacturers is announced early next year, Panasonic stands alone in making TVs with Freesat reception built-in (including HD).

The Panasonic TX-37LZD81 is one such set.

The Panasonic TX-37LZD81 has a pretty wide footprint, with a stand design identical to that of the PZ81 range plasmas, and its thick bezel is topped off, predictably, with a piano black finish.

Connection-wise, it's sufficiently well-stocked with three HDMI outputs (two located on the rear,
one along the right hand side), component video inputs, two RGB Scarts, an S-video input, composite video output and XGA PC inputs. On the audio side there are optical and stereo phono outputs.

Add to these a common interface slot suitable for sliding in a CAM for terrestrial pay TV options such as Setanta Sports or other satellite pay TV services (Sky excluded). There's also an SD card reader for JPEG image display and an ethernet port, which will find a use once Freesat launches its promised broadband on-demand services.

When first switched on, the TV tunes into satellite (it's a lot quicker compared to some of the dedicated Freesat boxes we've seen), then terrestrial channels.

You can view channels in full screen in a grid or as programme lists and view programmes by type and channels by category. You can also set a manual timer and create up to four 'profiles' (essentially favourites lists), for which you can view a guide for your chosen channels only.

It's not as attractively presented as the Freesat effort, but it still manages to be a cut above that found in many other flatscreens.

Switching to our Yamaha Blu-ray player, the panel proves adept at faithfully reproducing fine details such as the black uniforms of our heroes in X Men 3, while also smoothly keeping up with hectic action scenes.

The TechRadar hive mind. The Megazord. The Voltron. When our powers combine, we become 'TECHRADAR TEAM'. You'll usually see this author name when the entire team has collaborated on a project or an article, whether that's a run-down ranking of our favorite Marvel films, or a round-up of all the coolest things we've collectively seen at annual tech shows like CES and MWC. We are one.