HDTV Magazine
Welcome, Anonymous  •  Sign In  •  Register  •  Help
» » »

HDTV Phoenix AZ

Buying a new TV takes time especially now that there are so many incredible options available. You want something that’s ahead of its time and will last for a while. 1080p HDTV’s have become the norm and most are flat panel TV’s or wall mountable flat screens. You can also choose to purchase LED plasma LCD TV or the brand new 3DTV’s that are starting to make a splash everywhere. Your home entertainment center deserves the best. Watching movies or sports and playing video games just isn’t the same without that special TV. Please scroll down for more information and access to the home electronics stores in Phoenix, AZ listed that have all the latest consumer electronics.

DIRECTV
623-321-3962
189 N 1st St
Phoenix, AZ
KFNX 1100
(602) 277-1100
2001 N. 3rd St.
Phoenix, AZ
Direct Phoenix Satellite TV
(623) 748-0224
320 W Washington st
Phoenix, AZ
Direct USA Satellite TV Authorized Dealer
(602) 903-4423
5900 W Glendale Ave
Glendale, AZ
A K Big Discount Store
(623) 937-3470
6642 W Maryland Ave
Glendale, AZ
KPNX - Channel 12
(602) 257-1212
1101 N. Central Ave
Phoenix, AZ
Direct USA Satellite TV Authorized Dealer
(480) 305-0941
305 W Washington st
Phoenix, AZ
GameStop
(623) 463-8326
4345 W Bethany Home Rd
Glendale, AZ
A 1 Teds Appliances
(623) 937-3180
6108 W Glendale Ave
Glendale, AZ
Paradise Valley Satellite TV Providers
6237484202
6431 East Lincoln Drive
Paradise Valley, AZ

HDTV

The HT Guys
The HDTV Podcast
This review is featured in the latest podcast from The HT Guys
http://www.htguys.com/archive/2007/June01.html

We just reviewed the Panasonic TH-50PX75U , which comes with a street price of $2100 ( buy now ) a few shows ago . We loved the TV, but it's still a 720p model. We got a ton of email asking why we were living in the past, why we would have anything to do with a 720p plasma when the new 1080p model, the TH-50PZ700U , is already available. To be perfectly honest, we didn't have much luck getting our hands on one of the 1080p sets, so we went ahead with the 720p. Add on the fact that we still really like the 720p set, and our minds were made up. But not to turn a deaf ear to our loyal listeners, we tried our best to find a way to review the 1080p model. By the way, the extra pixels add up to a street price of $2900 ( buy now ).

As luck would have it, the wonderful people at Magnolia Audio Video in our local Best Buy in Mission Viejo had the TV and were willing to help us out. They were great; allowing us to come by a little before they opened and play with the TV for a while. They hooked up aBlu -ray player for us, let us turn on some of the other sets to do side by side comparisons, even let us go a little nuts for a while, tweaking settings and playing our own discs. It was an "in store" review, but was a close to an "on site" review as we could have had. They really went out of their way to make us feel at home. If you haven't been to a Magnolia in your area, you should really check it out. It's a great, non-threatening place to demo home theater gear.

Let's start with the best of the best. Using a 1080p Blu-ray source, the TV look absolutely flawless - perhaps the best 1080p display we've seen. The colors were amazing, the detail was phenomenal and the blacks were the blackest (is that a word?) we've seen on a digital display. We watched a couple 1080p movies and they all looked great. The TV didn't work with 1080p/24, so we had to have theBlu-ray player, a Sony BDP-S1, do the conversion to 1080p/60. Moving down the list to HD content, the set did well. Not exceptional, but not bad. It looked good on 1080i and 720p, but actually didn't look any better with those two formats than the 720p model we reviewed a couple weeks ago. For HD material it performed exactly like you would expect. It doesn't make the 720p or 1080i look any better, and it probably doesn't need to.

Stepping down again to bad HD content - overly compressed 720p running on Magnolia's loop - the 1080p started to show all those extra pixels. Blowing that bad content up just didn't work out well. The 720p TV seemed to handle it much better. There was more noise, more shimmering, more macro-blocking - essentially more of everything you don't want - on the 1080p set. Moving on down the ladder to your standard 480i DVD content, the set did surprisingly well. After watch...

Panasonic TH-50PZ700U
by The HT Guys on May 30, 2007

Click here to read the rest of this article from HDTV Magazine