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A new Philips TV, that too an ambilight! It’s come at the correct time, as I’ve been receiving copiousness of enquiries about sensibly priced full-HD LCD TVs lately. Of course, Philips has always been a firm choice for the budget-conscious. The PFL7422 was quite, and now we have the latest member – the PFL9532 – in the Tech2.0 lab. Let’s see if it carries.

Design and Features

Like all Philips TVs, this comes in an all-black bezel with a glossy finish. The stand is rectangular, with a similar external, though the neck of the stand is in metallic silver. The TV has a slim, horizontal black speaker expressively concerned to the bottom of the casing, as the left side has the buttons for operation. All in all, this is a good-looking TV that avoid curves and other costly design facets, yet fits easily into a classy décor.

In the rear are 3 HDMI connections, the norm these days. Component, composite and the rest are also present. A USB inlet plays JPEGs and MP3s, though not videos (that would be the day)! Though I feel that arrangement JPEGs on such a large screen will certainly lead to pixilation, Philips deserves credit for adding the feature.

The PFL9532 has a large number of features: some proprietary, some generic. Like all full-HD panels, this one too plays up to 1080p 50/60 Hz, and everything below, so resolution is not an issue. Philips has clearly jumped on to the frame-rate doubling bandwagon, so we get some interpolated 100 Hz frame rates: but how functional it in fact is a topic of conversation.

Perfect Pixel HD and HD Natural Motion are the proprietary features; these have carry out well in the past. Dynamic contrast is 8000:1, brightness is 550 cd/m2, and the color chip uses 14 bit meting out. That’s what’s stated – if precise, the colors are sure to be good.

Performance

Our expectations are high, thanks to the Blu-ray players we have been reviewing. We plugged the PFL9532 in to our PS3 first, as we are familiar with the content on it. But before I start gaming (oops, now you be familiar with how TVs are reviewed here), the necessary calibration disc was pressed into service. The DVE disc, which has never failed us, is almost part of the family now.

Blacks were not the blackest, though in contrast with some other brands it impresses. Even with contrast the limits are good, but not spectacular – nowhere near plasma, for example. What was good was the color correctness: it was intricate and lovely to look at.

The menu system in Philips TVs consist of a blue-and-white GUI that takes up the whole screen when turned on, and can be a modest irritating as a blue screen constantly intrudes in your frame of vision. When you go into the actual setting of each parameter, however, a normal level indicator strip comes on the side of the screen.

I turned on all the features: pixel plus, HD natural stuff etc. The outcome? A decent image flow, with motion frames being treated well. Jaggies and blur were present here and there, and an acute amount of backdrop noise lingered – especially in open, monotone images. But all this was in tolerable amounts; only if you are a fanatic would all this make a difference.

We’re seeing a gradual improvement in LCD TVs, with each new model. The question is: it possible to get full-HD fun at an affordable price? I think yes. The PFL9532 costs Rs 1,19,990, and that is a good thing. After all, not all of us can afford Rs 1.7 lakh and above. You wouldn’t get the best picture quality, but you do get hard accuse for money.

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