Trusted Reviews: Toshiba Regza 32XV505DB Review
A little while back we looked at and were impressed by
Toshiba's HD Ready 32CV505DB,
finding it a mighty fine 32in budget TV. So now we're more than a
little intrigued to find on our test benches the 32XV505DB:
another
Toshiba 32in LCD TV which brings a Full HD resolution to the table
while adding less than £100 to the price.
Aesthetically the 32XV505DB
- part of Toshiba's strangely-named Regza
TV range - looks identical to the 32CV505DB, so far as I can tell.
Which is no bad thing, as the combination of a slender gloss-black
bezel, silver outer trim, and thin ‘speaker strip' jutting
out along
the bottom make it one of the better looking small LCD TVs in town.
As we made clear at the start of this review, the absolute key
specification in the Toshiba
32XV505DB Full HD LCD TV's make-up is its 1,920 x 1,080
resolution - in fact, it's Toshiba's first ever Full HD 32in TV. This
resolution is joined, as with any Full HD TV worthy of the name these
days, by a pixel-by-pixel mode for showing the UK's 1080-line HD
sources without any image scaling involved to mess things up.
Another very impressive number up the Toshiba
32XV505DB's sleeve is its claimed
contrast ratio of 30,000:1. Achieved with the help of a dynamic
contrast arrangement, this figure is easily one of the highest we've
yet seen attached to a 32in TV. Fingers crossed it turns out to be more
than just Toshiba playing ‘the specification numbers game'.
Calling up the TV's onscreen menus - which prove a bit small
for
comfortable reading - uncovers another selection of noteworthy
features. For instance, there's a colour management tool; an auto
contrast facility that can adjust the picture based on an assessment of
light levels in your room; the option to deactivate the dynamic
contrast system if you find it making black levels look unstable; plus
both MPEG and standard noise reduction routines.
Inevitably my first port of call in assessing the Toshiba
32XV505DB's picture
quality has to be its HD performance. Does the set's Full HD resolution
actually make its HD pictures from games and films look sharper and
cleaner than those of the 32CV505DB? Indeed it does.
The Full HD pixel count also lets the TV show just a fraction
more
clarity with such picture detail ‘niceties' as the stubble on
Wallace's
face in the shot where he gets his first glimpse of York.
There are other strengths to report, too, that aren't necessarily a
direct bi-product of the Toshiba
32XV505DB Full HD LCD TV's extra resolution. For instance, it
produces really good black levels for its price point, suffering
relatively little with LCD's still-common 'greying over' issue.
Admittedly there is a trace of clouding over extremely dark scenes,
such as the night-time bagpipe serenade to Wallace's dead father in Braveheart.
But during most ‘normal' footage, which contains a mix of
brights and
darks, the black levels look punchy and help the image enjoy real
dynamism - a dynamism enhanced further by the TV's exceptional levels
of brightness.
Standard definition pictures on the 32XV505DB really don't
look very
hot at all, if I'm brutally honest, with the Active Vision LCD
processing tending to leave one or two rough edges as it goes about
translating standard def PAL content to the screen's Full HD pixel
count. Common ailments include exaggerated MPEG noise, noticeably more
motion blur than you tend to see with HD, and a slightly unstable,
flickery look to proceedings that might, perhaps, have been stopped if
the set had 100Hz processing.
Actually, once I'd noticed this flicker on standard definition, I also
occasionally spotted it with HD, such as in the trees and the
battlefield of the long-distance shots of the English Army about to
charge Wallace and his motley Scottish crew in the first battle.
What's more, in standard def mode some skin tones can look a
little
patchy, as the MPEG blocking prevents the TV delivering the sort of
ultra-smooth colour blends a Full HD TV might normally be expected to
produce.
Obviously I tried to counter these blocking issues with the TV's MPEG
noise reduction circuits, but in order to reduce the digital artefacts
to the sort of level I was happy with, the processing had to soften the
picture too much for comfort.
When it comes to audio, the 32XV505DB is in the same boat as the
32CV505DB. Which is to say that it sounds rather average, truth be
told, as a wide soundstage and solid amount of bass are countered by an
over-crowded mid-range, a slight lack of raw power, and even a tendency
to suffer cabinet hums when pushed really hard.
Verdict

