Panasonic PT 47WX49 Rear Projection

Panasonic PT 47WX49 Rear Projection 

DESCRIPTION

- HDTV Display Capability (1080i, 480p)1
- 16:9 Aspect Ratio
- 2-Tuner Picture-in-Picture with Split Screen Display
- Progressive Scan Doubler
- Progressive Cinema Scan for 3/2 Pulldown
- Fine Pitch Screen
- 5-Element Hybrid Lens System
- High-Resolution CRTs
- 9-Point Digital Convergence
- 3D Y/C Comb Filter

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-10 of 27  
[Jun 30, 2004]
sales@espressoonline.com
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

NONE

Weakness:

3 main boards replaced and it now has only lasted 2 years and another thing has burned!

BAD BAD BAD! Dont buy this TV! After just 1 month 3 mother boards replaced. After 2 years somthing else burned up again. I give up! NOT worth the money. Bad HD picture also compared to other sets. Any one elese with this problem?

Similar Products Used:

JVC

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Oct 23, 2003]
darkside
AudioPhile

Strength:

low price nothing else!!!!

Weakness:

Poor warranty Panasonic will not cover screen burn Screen burn is inevitable Most tubes will only last 1-2 years Parts & labor are expensive Very high maintenance TV. Expect poor customer service from Panasonic. Only 3 veiwing modes compared to others that have up to 5 or 6 veiwing modes.

I purchased the 53" vers. of this HDTV in Sept. 2002. I was very pleased with the picture quality and the price/performance compared to other manufactures that I looked at(at first). For several months I watch regular TV in 4:3 mode, but mostly watched DVD's in either full or zoom modes. After only 8 months of use (casual use at that) I noticed yellowing had occured on the inside part of the screen due to watching it in 4:3 mode (and way below the recommended 15% of the total veiwing time per week). On page 6 of Panasonic's manual it does say that use of this TV in 4:3 mode is only recommend for 15% of the total veiwing time per week. I think that statement from Panasonic is VERY deceiving!!! After all, some may only watch TV for a few hours a day while others may watch TV for several hours daily. I called Panasonic to have tech. come out to the house to look over the TV to determind the problem. Of course it was screen burn in. And of course Panasonic WILL NOT cover that in their warranty. The technician that came over told me that he had customers that owned both Sony & Hitachi HDTV's that had similar problems within the warranty period and both Sony & Hitachi DID cover the repair and parts costs for their customers. After lodging several complains about this prematual burn in with Panasonic, they basically burried my case & completely blew me off as a customer. Everytime I called or was contacted by them, I was treated like a burden instead of a customer. After spending almost $2000 with them I would have expected better treatment. I will never buy another Panasonic item of ANY design after my experience with this TV. I now watch regular TV in ZOOM mode ONLY!!! For those of you that have this problem, expect to pay around $300 for the part and up to $200 for installation if you're going to pay to get it fixed yourself, which I will end up having to do. If you do buy this type of TV, it is a high maintenance TV. Expect to have this problem eventually, even as a casual watcher. As I said before, I bought it mainly to watch DVD movies on. But even if you're buying it for that purpose alone, also be warned that 80% or more movies are filmed in 70mm compared to 35mm. A 35mm movie on DVD would fill the screen completely; no black bars on the top & bottom. That is basically the difference between 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen and 16:9 widescreen. So most DVD movies that you'll watch on this TV WILL have thin black bars at the top & bottom of the TV in "full" mode. Panasonic in their infinite wisdom has no compensation mode for this, where as other manufactures do, thus eliminating the top & bottom black bars by cutting off a small portion of the left and right sides. In doing this, they FORCE their buyers to watch movies in a modes that is NOT recommended in manual. That is utter BS!!!!! Panasonic knows this! And they know that everyone that buys one of their rear projection 16:9 HDTV's will eventually have to also buy replacement tubes and pay for repair costs. I DO NOT recommend this TV for someone that will be watching it on a regular basis!!! I will probably end up selling mine, taking the loss for it, and getting one that has additional viewing modes. Right now I have not fixed the TV and the warranty just ran out last month, however I did purchase the extended warranty with Circuit City and they did tell me that this problem would be covered. That remains to be seen however. Now, the TV also has begun to exhibit burn in due to watching DVD's that have black bars on the top & bottom. Not to mention the contrast is WAY OFF. Dark images blend in with no detail whatsoever going completely black, while brighter scenes become washed out. There is no way to adjust any of the setting to compensate for this after trying just about every adjustment within the TV's menuing system. And by the way, I've never connected a game system or computer system to this TV as they produce a "hotter" signal than the tuner or other video input devices (dvd player, vcr, laser disc, etc). I also kept my brightness, color, and picture levels BELOW 30, and I still got screen burn after only 8 months. Thinking about buying a Panasonic HDTV? DON'T!!!!!!

Similar Products Used:

Toshiba 51" rear projection 4:3

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Jan 29, 2003]
moviedog
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

champaing on a beer budget

Weakness:

cabinet, green convergence off a tad

This is a follow up review after reading about screen burn in probs others are having I've used this set for 13 months now in 4:3, streach,and various other modes for extended periods and so far have no burn in A lot of this comes from using the factory preset mode which jacks the contrast all the way up. Any set that has the contrast boosted like this will have problems, especially rptvs' enthusiasts like myself have long had a prob with manufacturers doing this mess, a lot of people think that the "normal" picture setting is the way to go and screen burn in is the result I run my set at 25 for brightness and contrast and 30 for dvds and dont have any burn in at all, despite computer and 4:3 use. If anything the picture is even better now thatb the set has broken in watching DVDs with the picture setting at HD color is a delight. Color is rich, detailed and is miles ahead of a regular set. My only gripe is that you can now get a 53" for what I paid for my 47". But I still love this set

Similar Products Used:

first HDTV

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jan 07, 2003]
mikefoster_pcola
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

You gotta see the picture!

Weakness:

None yet. I got a burn from leaving it on for 4 wks, but that was my fault. Will keep you posted on the cost of repair and Panasonic's service. They were good on the phone.

Unbeleivable TV (& DVD). Spiderman never looked so good. I don't know if I'll ever go back to the movies.

Similar Products Used:

Matching Panasonic progressive scan DVD.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jan 03, 2003]
Yaolong Tan
Casual Listener

Strength:

Not for this article.

Weakness:

A mentioned in the summary

Panasonic 47WX49 Projection offers a 4x3 viewing mode for watching regular TV broadcast programs. However, there is a BIG design drawback. Because of the strong white background projection when using 4x3 mode, the side-panel display pixels will be burned much faster than the center 4x3-area pixels. After a while, you will clearly see a distinct side-panel burning area when you use other modes such as full or adjust mode. The side-panel burn still happens when you try not to continously watch TV in 4x3 mode, for example, switching to full or adjust modes for 2 hours after watching 4x3 mode for 2 hours. It ONLY depends on what is the total time you use 4x3 mode. This means the side-panel burn problem will eventually happen if you use 4x3 mode long enough. I bought a Panasonic 47WX49 in Match 2002. I never used the game player or computer on it but just normal TV viewing. Sure enough, after only 6 month, I start to see two grey stripes showing on the side panels when I use the full or adjust mode. And worst of all, it is NOT covered by the warranty at all. If you carefully read the owner's manual, you can see the following words, "WARNING: the marking or retainined image on the picture tube resulting from viewing fixed image is not an operating defect and as such is not covered by Warranty. The projection television is designed to display constant moving images on the screen. Continuous viewing of stationary images such as letterbox pictures on standard screen TVs (with top/bottom bars), non-expanded stardard (4:3) pictures on wide screen TVs (with side bars shown on each side of an image), stock market report bars (ticker running at the bottom of the screen), video game patterns, fixed scoreboards, bright station logos, on-line (internet) or repetititve computer style patterns should be limited". So, it mentioned continously viewing, however, it does not (or dares not) mention that it is actually the total watching time causing the problem. As I know, other Panasonic Projection TV models have similar problems. So, be aware of this side-panel burn problem when you make the purchase decision, which in some sense they would rather not let you know when you make such a decision.

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
2
[Oct 08, 2002]
dedmiston
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Easy setup and controls. Excellent contrast and brightness. Component in picutre is great. Nice S-video on all inputs, (still recomend component if you can)

Weakness:

4:3 view is annoying with White bars on the side, should be option to change to other black. Input changing (two component in, 4 video in, 1 cable in) is difficult, cable, component DVD, VCR and Playstation 2, takes a while to scoll through. I do need to callibrate once every two months, easy to do, but... Picture quality on non component is lacking.

when purchasing a new TV have to look HDTV or compatible. Given the size of my living room, I could not go too big, and realized below 50" I could fit. Originally looked at 40 inch Toshiba, and was very impressed, as well as Hitachi. The Panny put a very comparable picture to the smaller TV for close to the same price. Upon 15 min of playing with it, the set up controls are far superior to like size/price TV. Testing with DVD was not a let down at home, the brights do not force me to shade every window, which was a concern. There is a review listed that said the 4:3 mode ruined his TV, quite possible, it would be nice to be able to change this color. As long as you realize that Rear projection is not Tube this is a very servicable TV, that I hope lasts me my 8 years or so.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Oct 01, 2002]
whphel
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

picture quality, inputs, tweekability

Weakness:

cabinet build is not as stong as i would like.

I had first bought this on a whim i had wanted an widescreen HDTV for along time and I finaly just decided it was time originaly I was going to get a 40" toshiba but im so glad I did'nt the picture of this tv once calibrated will give any other brand tv even in the 5000.00 range a run for the money. Som times i just can belive that the picture is as good as it is and I have not even had the set ISF'd yet. You cant go wrong with these panny sets. Sure more expensive tv's may look better out of the box but thats what your paying for there if your willing to do some tweeking yourself this tv will blow you away.

Similar Products Used:

non- this is my first owned rptv but have demoed a 40" samsung lcd and toshiba 40"

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Sep 25, 2002]
CoolbeaN145
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Amazing Picture Quality Price

Weakness:

Have to work around the 4:3 mode I don't reccomend hooking ANYTHING up with standard video inputs. Even S-Video looks pale in comparison to component video. I don't really consider the black at black and blooming a weakness because all other sets in this range have the same problem to even more of a degree

My 27 inch Direct veiw POS was starting to die so I went shopping. I knew I wanted to get an HD set. Anything less at this point would be silly. After looking around and reading reveiws I narrowed it down to either a Toshiba or a Panny. It came down to availability. I couldn't find the Tosh I wanted anywhere and I only found 2 places that had the Panny. It took just a little tweeking out of the box. Set the convergance, and used a copy of video essentials to get the other color/brightness settings right. I must say that this screen can get VERY VERY bright. I had to turn the brightness down almost all the way to get black at black. And the white level is WAY TOO HOT! Again I had to turn it way down to get it right. I imagine this is why some people have problem getting a burned image in 4:3 mode. The picture is WONDERFULL! The only noticiable problems are that it doesn't quite hold black at black in the presence of a bright image and the blue channel tends to bloom quite a bit. Barely noticiable while viewing but easy to see when setting convergance. The biggest problem is being nearly forced to view a 4:3 image in "JUST" mode for fear of damaging the set. I avoided this problem by using a digital cable box hooked up with component video. It puts the black bars on the sides naturally so the set doesn't have to put up the grey bars.

Similar Products Used:

None at home, but I looked at SEVERAL

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jul 15, 2002]
Andy
AudioPhile

Strength:

Best picture quality in the under $2500 class. Good sound quality.

Weakness:

I wish I had a few more options to tweak the color settings, but it still has more options than many comparable TVs.

I demand the absolute best quality picture and it took me three months to find a big screen 16:9 television under $2500 that I was willing to own. When I bought my Panasonic 8 months ago, it was the best bang for the buck out there. A beautiful picture and reasonable sound. Do not buy this TV or any 16:9 RPTV if you want to run it in 4:3 mode! Even normal 4:3 pictures look good on this set when stretched to 16:9.

Similar Products Used:

Never owned, but I have spent much time viewing comparable Sonys, Hitachis, Toshibas, Mitsubishis and others.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jul 03, 2002]
Bobsprit
AudioPhile

Strength:

Great Picture period.

Weakness:

Not a set for watching ANYTHING but anamorphic material. This (and NO widescreen) should be a TV for watching Star Trek.

It cracks me up to read reviews from people with warranty problems and picture tweaking. Here are two tips: 1) Buy a REPLACEMENT Warranty on any TV over 500 dollars. 2) Don't buy a RPTV set and certainly not a HDTV without expecting a LOT of tweaking. That said, the Panny delivers an AMAZING picture, near film like with a progressive scan player. A little research on the set online (see Brett's HT and Panny Website) will ensure you have the facts first.

Similar Products Used:

Pioneer, Zenith, Sony

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-10 of 27  

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