LG 42PQ30 42-Inch 720p Plasma HDTV
July 27th, 2009 by hdtvman
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User Reviews
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| LG 42PQ30 42-Inch 720p Plasma HDTV |
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| Manufacturer: LG |
| Customer Rating: |
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| List Price: $749.95 |
| Sale Price: Too low to display |
| Availibility: Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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| Buy Now |
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Product Description |
| 600Hz refresh rate, HD performance and Mega Contrast 42" PDP HDTV, 1024 x 768 Resolution, 20,000:1 Contrast Ratio, 1,500:1 cd/m2 Brightness, ATSC/NTSC/Clear QAM - 1 Tuner, SRS TruSurroundXT, 3 HDMI input. USB 2.0. |
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Product Details |
- 600Hz sub-field driving refresh rate technology for realistic movement in sports and movie actions
- 720p Full HD resolution 1365 x 768p with 3x HDMI v 1.3 digital inputs with swivel stand
- Mega contrast ratio of 2 million to 1 provides sharper image quality
- Smart energy savings 3.0 specifications
- LG Simplink allows for convenient control of other LG products using HDMI connection
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Video Reviews |
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Customer Reviews |
GREAT VALUE IN A FLAT PANEL
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| Review Date: April 16, 2009 |
| Reviewer: John Rivera, brooklyn, ny |
Just replaced my 2 year old Panasonic Plasma with the 42pq30 from LG. The LG delivers a fantastic picture, the 600 mhz fluid motion effect works beautifully for sports and action movies. The ultra high contrast ratio of 2,000,000:1 really brings out the dark backgrounds when fitting. Oddly enough it performed especially well while I was watching Charlie Rose. That black back-drop he uses really creates a personal proximity between him and his guests. The classic mahogany table is equally appealing on the set creating the ultimate prop for shared space and time.
I would highly recommend this TV for anyone not looking to spend a fortune on a good quality flat panel television. |
Very Happy with purchase!
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| Review Date: August 5, 2009 |
| Reviewer: Debra Koch, St. Charles, MO United States |
| I waited for over a month before leaving a review, I'm still happy with product. Color is great, movement flow is great. Love how it recognizes different products when plugged into it. I bought it so I could watch the border collie trials in England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales that I normally play on my computer. The trials look beautiful on this lg plasma screen. Sound and video worked flawlessly hooked up by one hdmi cable. Maybe 1080p would be better but not hundreds of dollars better, at least not to me. I took it off the energy saving mode that it is set to by default and image quality is vastly improved. I still have not played around with the usb features but I am glad that the feature is there. I hope the reliability factor is there but only time will tell. Terrific value for money. |
Love this plasma television (update after a year of use)
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| Review Date: November 20, 2009 |
| Reviewer: Khanh Ngoc Kim, Houston, TX USA |
I've had the LG 42PQ30 plasma tv for about 2 months now and I'm still learning how to use more of its features.
The other day I upconverted my dvds to 1080p and noticed the TV picked up the signal as 1080/60p. Then i figured wow I got a 1080p television at a 720p plasma tv price. What a nice tv, I was able to display 1920 by 1080 resolution from my pc vga output even though the picture is a little washed out because of vga resolution limitations. I will try to go DVI out to HDMI and see if there's a difference in picture quality. The picture on 480p, 720p, and 1080i were all great. I guess when you have a 42inch television standard definition doesn't get dragged out and blurred like the larger 50 plus inch television. This tv displays everything I threw at it greatly. I looked at my friend's Samsung LN40B650 with 120 hz and noticed my LG 42" plasma displays football games alot better with no blurs. One caveat is that this LG plasma has one of the best hdtv tuners that I've seen. It picks up all the digital channels in my area with no artifacts and i'm only using old rabbit ears antenna that I bought for $10 ten years ago. Nevertheless, this TV is a plasma so lights need to be minimized to eliminate the glare.
Update: After a year of having owned and played with this tv, it has been a pleasure. No burn in, no IR, even though i thought there was one when I first had the tv. Now i can have anything on the plasma and don't even worry about IR. Sometimes i have the tv on pc input without screensaver for an hour and no IR. The tv just automatically shifts the picture every 10 minutes to eliminate IR. Everyone that comes to the house to visit compliments how the picture looks on the tv. They were absolutely stunned when I said i bought it for less than $600. Finally, i found that the max native resolution for the LG 42pq30 is 1366 by 768 (720p per say) not the foolish 1080p i thought when I first got the tv. When you plug a pc input to tv, the computer foolishly recognizes it as a 42 inch plasma 1080p. The best part about this plasma tv is when i rent a nice action movie and turn off all the lights and turn on surround sound. Wow, its better than being at the movie theatre. I did not get that feeling when i went to my sister in law's house when she first bought the expensive Samsung UN55B7000 LED tv. In the dark there's little white freckles in dark scenes that irritated me. Funny my wife hasn't even talked about replacing the tv, even though everything else in the house has changed in the past year !!! |
Great TV at a great price
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| Review Date: July 22, 2009 |
| Reviewer: A. Bunner, Ohio |
| I actually bought mine from Sears online at a net cost of $565 after rebate. I've had it two weeks and am thrilled with everything about it - picture (been watching lots of sports), sound, and ease of use. The user interface is really neat, too, almost like a computer. When you connect another input - like a USB or a game system, the TV tells you that another device has been detected,and then asks you if you are ready to use it. Nice touch. Another nice touch is that it automatically adjusts the screen temperature based on the light levels of the room (if you have it set to automatic). Go for it! |
Glorious Picture!
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| Review Date: January 7, 2010 |
| Reviewer: John L., |
| I have had this TV for about three months now and the picture quality is outstanding. In fact, the only imperfection I notice is a slight haloing effect when really bright elements are adjacent to really dark ones (I usually only see this during film credits with bright text on a black background but it's nothing major). This haloing effect seems due to the two-layer deign (a clear plastic layer set in front of the main plasma screen). I think this is the main trade-off at this price level. Otherwise, the picture is gorgeous. The picture is so good that, unfortunately, it reveals all the flaws in over-compressed "hi-def" source material. I have DISH HD and I notice a lot of artifacts and black crush (over-compression of dark parts of an image). I can't wait until the satellite, cable companies, and studios stop over-compressing their signals so I can enjoy a real hi-def picture. And when they do, this little LG will easily be up to the task. Be warned, it is essential that you adjust the brightness, contrast, and especially the gamma to get a great picture. Out of the box I was unimpressed but after several hours of tweaking I finally honed-in on a near-perfect combination of settings for my satellite and DVD/bluray. The brightness, clarity and naturalness of the picture sometimes gives me the sense that I'm looking out a window instead of at a television. This tv is much like my expensive Sony Trinitron CRT except with a wide screen, perfect geometry and much higher resolution. Also, the up-conversion it does for standard definition is the best I've ever seen. I wasn't sure I wanted a plasma because I couldn't find one that wasn't an unbelievable power hog but this little beauty is rated at a scant 180 watts which is less than my smaller 37" LCD! At this price level, I would have to give this TV 6 stars (on a 5-star scale). |
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