Thursday, August 17, 2017

Panasonic TX-L47DT50 in the test

Panasonic TVs are known for their very natural image. Attributes such as color reproduction, movement sharpness and angle of view should be based on the good outdated image tube. Because all this seemed to be easier to achieve with plasma technology, Panasonic concentrated long and forcefully on this market and even denied the LCD panels of its own production large image diagonals. These IPS Alpha screens are excellent. And Panasonic is doing well to sell these TVs now in sizes up to 55 inches.


Panasonic TX-L47DT50: Unrivaled viewing angle


Panasonics Panels use where the LCD technology has the biggest drawback: at the viewing angle. And here the TX-L47DT50 can score points: We have never been able to measure such a good viewing angle with an LCD product. The display is almost as close to that of plasma TVs.


Panasonic TX-L47DT50: Best equipped


It is important not only to measure the brightness drop as required by the standard, but also to consider the loss of the black value (and therefore the contrast) as well as the shift (the fading) of colors. And these three parameters are unmatched in the new Panasonic panel.


Picture gallery


The high-quality panel was built into a housing that is stunning for Panasonic. It is accentuated in metal, but remains slender and light-footed. Whoever looks at the device more closely and notices that it is not a blender, but is really solid.


Panasonic TX-L47DT50: Image Quality


With four HDMI inputs, three USB sockets and a SDXC card slot, Panasonic offers more than a lot of competitors. WLAN is also already integrated, and Bluetooth is used solely for controlling the 3D shutter glasses.


Multimedial, Panasonic is also very active and offers besides the usual DLNA functionalities also the operation by mobile phone (via VIERA Remote App). Upcoming versions will be able to send videos to the TV and should also outsource the EPG.


The picture quality was well over the year. We can certify the TX-L47DT50 motion cycles in real 200 Hz, which even in the right setting look quite film-like. The colors come clear and can be adjusted extensively, but the contrast suffers in the dark room with the only slight dimming of black in the Kinomodi.


Blu-rays and TV material are as powerful as they are brilliant and are far ahead of the competition at a slightly slanting angle. 3D can not achieve very good conversations despite long black phases of backlighting.


Ease of use and a solid look will give Panasonic many new friends.


Download: Table


Conclusion


Comparison test: Five TV sets with 40 to 42 inches in test, comparison test: Design TV, comparison test: IFA 2012 - Three TV novelties in test

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