EXPERIENCE A WHOLE NEW VISUAL ERA WITH PANASONIC VIERA'S PX60 RANGE
The new Panasonic TH42PX60PED is the most desirable Plasma TV on the market today. Winning awards from What HiFi, What Video & Widescreen, T3, What Home Cinema and many more, it has critical acclaim from the experts of the industry, which is not surprising with such a high specification. A 10,000:1 Contrast Ratio gives the image a true to life colour balance, whilst the Viera V-Real Technology reproduces an outstanding 29 billion colours over 3,075 steps of gradiation, producing a lifelike image. The superior technology is encompassed in a seriosly stylish casing, making it an awe inspiring centrepiece to any living room.
Features
42inch Plasma Display Panel
HD Ready
Digital Freeview
1024x768p Screen Resolution
10,000:1 Contrast Ratio
G9 Progressive HD Plasma Panel
20 watt Nicam Stereo Speakers
Viera V-Real Technology
Fastext
3D Colour Management
Multi-Window PAT (Picture-and-Text)
Connections
2 x HDMI Connection
3 x SCART
1 x S-Video
1 x Composite Video
1 x Component In
1 x VGA In
1 x RCA Audio Output
1 x Headphones Connection
Other
WxHxD (mm): 1020 x 705 x 95
Weight: 30 Kg
Reviews
What Home Cinema - What we consumers really should be demanding is a TV that can handle HDTV, DVDS and normal TV equally well - and that's just what Panasonic's gorgeous 42PX60 does
What Home Cinema - No messing about with this stylish Plasma TV, delivering where it matters most - its pictures are absolutely stunning
Home Cinema Choice - Fine with DVD and just plain mind-blowing with high-definition, it would be my display of choice to partner Sky's upcoming HD services. The picture awesome, with natural colour reproduction, subtle gradations of tone, fine detailing, excellent black level response, and particularly impressive performance with high-definition sources
What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision - High-def content looks stunning, too, with quite brilliant amounts of detail to savour, and motion tracked sweetly and smoothly
What Video and Widescreen TV - Panasonic's latest addition to the Viera family looks to remind us why plasma is still, inch for inch, the best bets for flatscreen finesse