Panasonic Viera TX-37LZD800A

By Ty Pendlebury on 26 September 2008

The Panasonic Viera TX-37LZD800A is a very capable telly and is ideally suited to wide rooms due to its excellent viewing angles.

Editor's rating:8.0 User rating:8.7
  • Good: Excellent off-axis viewing • Smooth, accurate motion • Good colour and detail
  • Bad: Pictures are a little soft • Not suited to tweakers • Poor SD picture processing
  • Specs: LCD • 37 inch • 1920 x 1080 pixels • 3 • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$2,399.00

Panasonic is a company known for its plasma televisions, but in the past few years Panasonic has produced some top-notch LCDs. And we think the 800 series is perhaps the best of the lot. While it may not achieve the lofty heights of its brethren, this television is a diamond in the rough.

Design
Unlike its competitor, LG, which has a different design for its plasma and LCD ranges, Panasonic is sticking with its "apex" design for both ranges. Of course, this can make things confusing and on first glance it's hard to tell what this TV actually is. The black gloss bezel is the same as the silver trim at the bottom.

Unlike other TVs in the range, the SD card slot is located at the back underneath a little door. If the TV is wall mounted, it would make it difficult to access this port.

The remote control is the same as every other Panasonic remote we've seen in the last few years. It's big and fairly user-friendly, but getting a little stale. We also found that some of the buttons were a little "squeaky" — not a problem we've encountered with Panasonic remotes before.

Features
The 800A is a full-HD screen with a native resolution of 1920x1080 pixels. To support this it has several features designed to maximise HD viewing, including an HD tuner, three HDMI ports and what Panasonic calls a "Sub-Pixel Controller" for reduced jagged edges.

The panel itself is a premium In-Plane Switching (IPS) Alpha Panel, which has a claimed 178-degree Viewing Angle. Black levels aren't as high as some of the other panel types, but still respectable at a dynamic 10,000:1 contrast ratio.

According to the online specs the television has a 100Hz mode, but nowhere on the TV itself or in the menu is this mentioned. When testing, the on-screen movement is fluid, but we don't think this TV has motion compensation.

Performance
Like many full-HD TVs, the Panasonic sets its sights on 1080p content but somehow neglects that most people are still watching standard-definition content. This revelation came out during our synthetic tests using the two HQV test disks. We found there was a wide disparity between, for example, the set's performance on jaggies tests between HD and SD was miles apart. The 800A aced the HD test — jaggies were nowhere to be seen — but in SD the performance was woeful. While anti-aliasing is only part of the picture, so to speak, it forms an important part of any television's picture processing suite.

Regular high-definition content, via Ten's afternoon documentaries, looked fantastic, and Blu-ray looked similarly fine, though lacking some very fine detail. Standard definition also looked good, although it wasn't able to make the most of the King Kong DVD without a little adjustment to the sharpness levels — the default picture modes are a little soft.

For an LCD, the black levels were rather good, and the new Batman Begins Blu-ray looked realistically gloomy, yet still brimmed with detail.

That's one problem with this TV, and Panasonics in general — they lack a User mode and fine calibration controls. Inevitably, you'll need to choose one of the presets, with Normal and Cinema looking best, though we found they still needed some adjusting.

Despite missing 100Hz as advertised, we think that the set is better without it, and it still has 24p Blu-ray support. But we weren't prepared for how smoothly the Panasonic tracks motion, even on DVD. And there were none of the artefacts you'd normally associate with 100Hz modes either.

We were very impressed by the Panasonic's off-axis performance — it was uniformly excellent. In fact, it performed almost as well as a CRT or Pioneer Kuro in this regard, so if you're looking for a TV you can view comfortably from anywhere in the room this is the one to get.

No blurring, no "triple-balling" (don't giggle, that's what 100Hz ghosting is also called) and good viewing angles. This is an LCD that simply refuses to act like one.

Sound quality was generally good, with Music mode sounding best for all content. Speech mode didn't really boost intelligibility and mostly came off sounding thin.

Judged against Panasonic's own plasma TVs the LZD800A comes off wanting, but against its competitors it's definitely a good screen. It may not have the fancy design or gimmicks of the LG Scarlets or Sony X series' of this world, but you know that the money you pour into the 800 series is going to be spent on picture quality. Surely the bezel is of secondary importance.

Topics: 37-inch, 1080p, lcd, panasonic, viera, 24p, TX-37LZD800A, 100hz, television

Comments (22)

  • Correz gave a review on 07/09/2009 01:31 Report abuse

    • Good: Extraordinary sharp HD picture; even better when coupled with Blu-Ray
    • Bad: Squeakly Remote, but then I most use a Universal. A little light spill from the lower edges.g

    Purchased this unit about 9 months ago based on reviews here and very happy with the purchase. Wide Angle of View. Excellent HD Picture which actually pops when coupled with a Pana Blu-Ray Player.

  • GJ gave a review on 08/06/2009 20:16 Report abuse

    • Bad: Remote

    Has anyone had fixed the problems associated with the remote for this model. Bought one last last year and the remote drives me nuts!
    Any ideas?
    GJ

  • Darlot36 gave a review on 06/06/2009 00:47 Report abuse

    from so many good reviews. I decided to buy TX37LZD850A tomorrow :)..

    Thanks a lot for all reviews.

  • Jan gave a review on 09/04/2009 10:57 Report abuse

    • Good: Very sharp pictures, motion control is produces smooth pictures for sports, natural colours, decent audio
    • Bad: blacks can be deeper, unresponsive remote bottons, no backlight adjustment

    This is actually a review for the LZD850 which I believe is similar to the 800 except that comes with a glossier (more reflective) screen, different remote and different speakers.

    I picked this up for $1900 and initially was quite disappointed by the excessive bleeding from the 4 corners of the screen, making black screen shots virtually unwatchable. Upon calling Panasonic and the retailer, it was determined this was a fault. The retailer replaced it and now the blacks are consistent with no bleeding from corners.

    Overall this is a very good tv with very sharp images and no noticeable jaggies. HD channels look very detailed with very natural colours. I also hooked it up with an upscaling dvd player and dvd pictures look great.

    The only major downer is that blacks are not terribly deep (this was noticeable when comparing it with a Samsung 6 series on the shop floor)

    Overall I'm very happy with the TV. Also considered the Samsung 6 series and Sony W series in 40" but it's difficult to make a real comparison without spending time with them.

  • Engelass gave 8/10 on 27/01/2009 23:19 Report abuse

    • Good: Good Picure Sound and price
    • Bad: 100Hz has not totally stopped motion blur....

    Great TV...buty a little disappointed with motion blur on fast motion pans...eg...cricket when ball is racing across filed...still see motion blur on fieldsman....I thought 100hz would erradicate this titally!

  • Chris gave 9/10 on 14/01/2009 20:53 Report abuse

    Update: got jack of SD Foxtel so upgraded to HD Foxtel after asking to cancel my contract. Picture looks great. So the average picture quality was definitely SD Foxtel not the TV

  • Pooley gave 9/10 on 14/01/2009 11:31 Report abuse

    • Good: Great picture, Not brilliant on most imported US garbage, extra size over an old 60cm certainly shows up faults of transmitted products.
      Some setting a bit ambiguous. Like sound auto level control and aspect ratio.
    • Bad: Lousy remote

    I agree with the comment about the poor quality remote control.
    The thing has to be pointed directly at the TV, slightly off line and nothing.
    Apparently there is a fix however I was told it would take up to six weeks, not likely to get done with my new TV mate.

  • Chris gave 9/10 on 02/01/2009 19:38 Report abuse

    • Good: Beautiful pictures and good sound. I highly recommend this LCD.

      youngjo, I have SD Foxtel and its fine. Sport is not perfect but it tracks well. Similar to other HD LCDs.
    • Bad: None

    Got mine at Bing Lee for $1750. Love it.

  • JohnnyTurk gave 8/10 on 30/12/2008 16:07 Report abuse

    • Good: Great Picture inc watching normal DVDs. Ease of set up and design
    • Bad: missing out on the free wii deal!

    Purchased the 32" version of this TV and it is very impressive albiet not reviewed on this site...

  • benn gave 9/10 on 28/12/2008 14:36 Report abuse

    • Good: hd channels look tops, easy to customize settings, 1080p, 24p,
    • Bad: meh!

    got mine from jb's for $1750 with 4yr warranty, its very good, but now i have to get a blu-ray player, more money!

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