Toshiba TP43H95 Rear Projection

Toshiba TP43H95 Rear Projection 

DESCRIPTION

RPTV

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-7 of 7  
[Jan 17, 2009]
MarcusV
Casual Listener

Strength:

Strengths are PQ. Even after DTV and HDTV came out, the PQ of this set made it very difficult to part ways with it. I've been using a digital DVR from the cable company and the conversion looks wonderful on this now antiquated set.

Weakness:

The remote, while well built, is difficult to use. The menu sustem is too cumbersome.
And today, for the first time in 11 years...problems! lol
Picture dimmed. remote's onscreen controls did not appear on-screen.
Turned it off. Let it rest for 30 minutes and it worked fine again for another hour before dimming again.
I'm sure this set could be serviced and repaired but the prices for quality LCDs and plasmas are coming down so I may have to part company with this wonderful TV.
It will be the last set in the house that wasn't replaced with the newer flat screens.

It is now 2009 and I have owned this slimline rptv for nearly 11 years.
It had the best picture in the showroom back in '98 and it's shallow depth of 17.5" made it look less like a rear projection of those in that era.

Similar Products Used:

I had also purchased a 41" Sony rptv about the same time asI bought this set.
The Sony was about $200 less than this Toshiba.
That Sony died over 2 years ago, and it had all sorts of convergence problems for the 2 years before it died.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Nov 16, 1999]
James Stephens
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Bright image, flat screen, wide selection of inputs.

Weakness:

On-screen menus are cumbersome. Changing from one input to another is slow and tedious. You can't just jump to one of the five options; you have to toggle through them one at a time.

In general,I like this television. It is the first rear-projection TV I've owned. I had avoided previous models because of their limited field of view, but with this model, I get a viewable image from anywhere within a 45-degree angle on either side of the screen.

The screen looks pretty big in my living room, yet the unit is designed so that if fits on a fairly narrow table. It doesn't take up much more room than my old 25" Mitsubishi.

The flat screen is highly reflective, and I've found it best to dim the lights, but even when the lights are on, it's not much of a problem.

The on-screen menu structure drives me crazy. I really hate clicking from the TV input to the DVD (video stream) input. I have to toggle through four options, and each option has a built-in delay. It would have been great if they had a button on the remote for each option--then anything would be just one click away.

Similar Products Used:

None.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Mar 17, 2000]
harry collins
Casual Listener

Strength:

good picture

Weakness:

blue crt

i had the tv for 4 months when the blue crt developed a phosphor burn. the crt was replaced under warranty. Four months later,same problem. The tv is still under warranty,but toshiba refuses to fix the problem. They accused me of watching the weather channel 24 hours per day which is not true. Toshiba will not stand behind their warranty.

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
3
[Nov 12, 1999]
Bill Vance
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Great picture. Does not overwhelm the room. Scan lines are alot less visible than the set just one size up.

Weakness:

The sound is just okay.

I think the picture quality is alot better than the 50 inch toshiba. There is much less scan line visibility and the picture seem much sharper. All my friends and family were suprised that this is a rear projection set, as its appearance and picture quality more resemble direct veiw. If you can't afford a progressive scan set, this is the way to go.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 04, 1999]
Frank Kim
an Audio Enthusiast

After months of thinking about it, I upgraded my 27 inch TV to complete my home theather revision from the Pro-Logic era to the Dolby Digital era. Current setup includes the Yamaha DSP-A1 mother of all processors and the venerable Sony 7000 DVD player. I'm using the DSP-A1 strictly for audio switching as it doesn't have component signal capability (just composite and S-Video).
The 7000 (which I bought last year!) is connected via Monster level 3 or some certification (can't remember) component cables to the color-stream inputs of the Toshiba. I used the Video Essentials DVD for setup.

During setup, I noticed that the red is oversaturated if I used the standard bar test to set the color/tint level. Lowering the color level resulted in less blue but it was acceptable. I used the "cool" overall color temperature setting. Brightness setting was variable during the blacker than black setup and I ended up with a compromise. If I didn't know better, I wouldn't have suspected just from looking at a regular, excellent looking picture. However, avoid the default factory settings.

Overall impressions are good, I sit only 7-8 feet away from the screen which was the reason I didn't go for a bigger TV. Interlace flicker is visible sometimes, especially during credits but I think this is due to NTSC limitations.

Compared this with the Sony Wega 36 inch and the 16x9 40 inch Toshiba RPTV, both of which were $1000 CDN more. The Wega is too good for NTSC and the 16x9 Toshiba would give me some more horizontal resolution on anamorphic DVDs but it isn't worth it for the 1/4 DVDs I have that support it. And besides, the full 43 inch 4:3 is great for watching sports (I've noticed with the bigger TV that most regular broadcast programming really sucks in picture quality).

I figure this set will give me 3-5 years till HDTV sets come down in price and we get progressive scan DVD players and other nice goodies (maybe like a bigger room to watch TV!)

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
[Jul 04, 1999]
Barry H. Adams
a Casual Listener

Just recently purchased this TV. Space limitations (and wife) would not allow me to get a bigger (RPTV). After watching this tv for several days now, using digital cable, DVD and VHS I could not be more pleased. The only thing that could have been done better is to allow for switching between all sources using the remote. The remote allows you to switch between antenna sources only. To switch between component and/or composite sources you must use the button on the front panel of the tv itself. Also, I thought the tv was just a little "pricey."
Anyone wanting (or needing) a smaller RPTV should seriously conside this tv.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
[Feb 08, 2000]
Mike Parenteau
Audiophile

Strength:

Size, styling, performance on S-Video & Component Video, more PIP features than you can imagine, wide lateral field of view

Weakness:

lots of dot crawl on graphics from tuner sources, narrow vertical field of view to eliminate hot-spots, slow to change channels (can't surf!)

Overall I'm very pleased with the little Cinema Series RPTV from Toshiba. The biggest factor in my deciding to buy it vs. a 36" direct view was the shallow cabinet (only 18.5") and the fact that letter-box images on a 36" set still look pretty small from my seating position.

The smaller 43" size makes scan lines almost invisible at my 12 foot viewing distance. I found that the 50" TV's scan lines were quite visible at the same distance. The only negative about the set is its video performance from the tuner when displaying graphics(lots of dot crawl and hanging dots) and the geometry of the screen. Mine has a noticeable shift to the right and the image is smaller in width at the top of the screen vs. the bottom, making vertical features bow inwards near the top. I will be making a call to Toshiba warranty to see if they can sort that one out. The performance on DVD via the component inputs is very, very good and I think it is almost the equal of some of the progressive scan sets but at about 65% of the price.

I think that this was the best way to go to get a larger image in a product that will serve as a bridging component until I get a DTV. I looked at a lot of sets (Hitachi & Sony) but the Toshiba had the best set of features, performance and price for the money

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-7 of 7  

(C) Copyright 1996-2018. All Rights Reserved.

audioreview.com and the ConsumerReview Network are business units of Invenda Corporation

Other Web Sites in the ConsumerReview Network:

mtbr.com | roadbikereview.com | carreview.com | photographyreview.com | audioreview.com