Toshiba Regza 46SV685DB review

Toshiba's late entry to the LED TV arena is worth waiting for

Toshiba 46SV685DB
The Toshiba 46SV685DB uses LED local dimming rather than the more common edge lighting

TechRadar Verdict

This TV offers good picture performance with some unreal contrast figures and some sweet audio but the design and price leave a lot to be desired

Pros

  • +

    Excellent contrast and detail

  • +

    Good quality audio

  • +

    Multimedia talents

Cons

  • -

    Price point

  • -

    Not particularly thin or stylish

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The 46SV685DB is Toshiba's debut LED-backlit television, a variant on traditional LCD that is fast-becoming commonplace and is the entry level model of the SV range of Toshiba's Regza TVs.

With its £2,500 price tag, it feels like a shift in focus for the brand. Is it trying to find a spot in the market away from the likes of Samsung and Sony?

Tosh led tv

Toshiba has been generous with its features and specification; alongside the four HDMI inputs is a wealth of multimedia compatibility, with an SD card slot, USB port and Ethernet connection allowing access to digital music, photo and movie files without the need to connect a separate source.

I would never recommend a TV as a music source – even though the TV's built-in speakers are surprisingly good at creating a dynamic, full-bodied sound – but it's fine for photo slideshows and copes well with DivX-encoded videos.

This is a mightily impressive screen that will improve almost anyone's home entertainment setup, but the 46SV685's asking price certainly isn't going to fall into everyone's budget. It's very expensive, to be honest, but I can see that price tag falling sharply in the coming months.

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Sam Kieldsen

Sam has been writing about tech and digital culture for over 20 years, starting off in video games journalism before branching out into the wonderful worlds of consumer electronics, streaming entertainment and photography. Over the years he has written for Wired, Stuff, GQ, T3, Trusted Reviews and PC Zone, and now lives on the Kent coast in the UK – the ideal place for a camera reviewer to ply their trade.