LG 32LE5900 review
At approaching £500, the LG 32LE5900 is quite an expensive 32in TV, but it’s a very good one. If you’ve got a maximum budget of £500, we wouldn’t look much further than the 32LE5900.
Specifications
32in, Freeview HD, analogue, 1,920×1,080 resolution, 3D: no, 4x HDMI
With the TV plugged into your network, you’ll be able to access LG’s NetCast, which lets you access various online media services directly on the TV. The YouTube client was particularly good, with content scaled to full screen looking sharp and well resolved. Likewise, when playing back XviD encoded SD video from USB the upscaling is very good indeed.
The LG 32LE5900 has both analogue and Freeview HD tuners and there’s an eight day EPG for the latter. There’s no preview window in the EPG, but the whole thing is semi-transparent, and you can at least get an idea of what’s going on with the selected channel.
After the superb scaling of YouTube and XviD media it comes as no surprise that the TV handles standard definition broadcast content beautifully. Even low bit-rate Freeview channels are well rendered on this TV, with excellent handling of MPEG noise. There’s also very little resolution loss with objects moving across the screen.
High definition performance doesn’t disappoint either. The Dark City Blu-ray was handled with aplomb – blacks are deep and there are still masses of detail in the shadows. Meanwhile the LG is just as adept at high intensity scenes, with the Casino Royale chase looking bright, bleached and hot, without ever looking washed out.
The LED goodness really comes into its own when watching Coraline on Blu-ray, with colours unbelievably vibrant and blacks as deep as the ocean. Even the Firefly Blu-ray box set looks good on this TV, despite the fact that the HD remastering of the series isn’t completely successful.
It’s not all a bed of roses with this TV, though. For one, the sound from the built-in speakers is pretty poor, even by general flat screen TV standards. And then there’s the price – at £482 this 32in is more expensive than some 40in sets. That said, if we had a maximum budget of £500, this is the TV that we’d spend our money on.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Rating | **** |
Physical | |
Viewable size | 32in |
Native resolution | 1,920×1,080 |
1080p support | Yes |
Aspect ratio | 16:9 |
HD ready | yes |
3D capable | no |
Contrast ratio | 5,000,000:1 dynamic |
Speakers | 2x 10W |
Bezel (top/side/bottom) | 42mm/40mm/65mm |
Screen depth | 40mm |
Screen elevation | 120mm |
Stand size (WxD) | 465x220mm |
Connections | |
DVI inputs | 0 |
D-sub inputs | 1 |
HDMI inputs | 4 |
Component inputs | 1 |
SCART | 1 |
S-Video input | 0 |
Composite inputs | 1 |
Audio outputs | optical S/PDIF out, 1x stereo phono |
Other | headphone output, 3.5mm minijack audio input, CI slot, 2 USB in |
Tuner | |
Tuner type | Freeview HD, analogue |
EPG | 8 day |
Environmental | |
Power consumption standby | 0W |
Power consumption on | 79W |
Buying Information | |
Warranty | one year RTB |
Price | £482 |
Supplier | http://www.rgbdirect.co.uk |
Details | www.lg.com/uk |