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Sony Bravia KDL-40W3000
73
Good
- Avg User Rating
- 5 User Reviews | add yours »
- Pros
- Very easy to set up and use
- Ffreeze feature uses PiP
- Cons
- Expensive
- $980.72 - $1,999.99
- From 6 Merchants
PC World Editor's Review
by Lincoln Spector
Sony's Bravia 40W3000 is a very good set, but not a bargain one.
There's nothing wrong with Sony's 40W3000 LCD set that a good price reduction wouldn't cure. Well, not much, anyway. I noticed some lackluster details in the broadcast high-def tests, but overall the images looked good (in our November issue's HDTV roundup, the Sony came in fourth out of twelve TVs in our picture-quality tests). If I hadn't been scrutinizing the image in a testing environment, I doubt I would have found anything wrong with it.
The 40W3000 combined a freeze button and picture-in-picture in the coolest way possible. Press 'Freeze', and the TV goes into PiP mode, with the big picture frozen and the little one continuing to display a live feed. Because the 40W3000 has only one tuner, however, you can't use PiP to watch two broadcast channels. Sony includes a headphone jack on the set for your late-night viewing pleasure.
Rather than put the controls below the screen as most manufacturers used to, or on the side as most do these days, Sony places them on the top of the unit. That's extremely convenient if you're not mounting the TV too high. Most of the inputs are in the back facing outward, and well over to one side for easy access; the rest are on the side of the set for even easier access. Only the coaxial connector faces down.
If only the on-screen controls had been as carefully thought out. The remote lacks a menu button; and to reach the main menu, you have to press Home--not the most intuitive of options. The menus seem to have been designed to look cool and different rather than to be useful, and they often left us wondering which direction we should scroll in to find an unseen option. Some choices require the user to push way too many buttons.
But that will cease to be a problem once you get the hang of the menus--or once everything is set up and you don't use the menus much anymore.
Sony's remote is very long, which makes some buttons difficult to access. On the other hand, it's programmable and backlit.
Lincoln Spector
User Reviews for Sony Bravia KDL-40W3000
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Reviewed by: Batmite
Duration of ownership:
Strengths: Picture, ease of use, # & types of inputs/outputs
Weaknesses: Audio is average
Overall Evaluation: This TV is amazing. It has buttons to quickly adjust the color levels to Vivid, Standard, Cinema, or custom and easily change wide and zoom views. The PIP is great how you can resize and toggle the audio between the two. SD even looks great on this TV compared to my friends HD that looks grainy. The audio seems fine, I can't tell the difference with the virtual surround sound and other audio features I enabled compared to regular TV audio. It all sounds the same. Overall the picture is smooth. I did notice slight ghosting when set to Vivid (or the brightness is all the way up) when there are fast or fast dark images. When I changed the color setting I didn't notice it anymore. I first connected the cable coax directly in the TV and the cable signal got analog and digital cable channels, music channels, and only the network HD channels. It was confusing the way the channels numbers were all over the map and some were 113.1, 113.2, etc. Some channels it was able to pull info like the station id, show name, and show length, but most it didn't. I then used the cable box with coax and that worked a lot better and the rest of the HD channels I was expecting came in. Then I traded in my cable box for an HDMI cable box and the picture is perfect through that connection. I couldn't ask for anything else in an HD TV than what this Sony offers.
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Reviewed by: bmain2248
Duration of ownership:
Strengths: Sharpness and quality of picture
Weaknesses: Speakers
Overall Evaluation: This is a great television set, beautiful picture, feature-rich and unmatched by the competition for the same amount of money spent. Watching a live sporting event, it feels as if you are right there in the stands. Outstanding value.
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