Typical price: £1,100
What is it: HD Ready LCD TV with 32-inch screen, dual integrated digital tuners and 40GB hard drive
What we think: The most fully-featured LCD TV on the market, but not one for picture purists
Humax LGB-32TPVR Review
Reviewed on: 5 April 2006
Humax made a name for itself when it released the first Freeview PVR, and ever since it's clung to the digital terrestrial service like a shipwrecked sailor grasping his life raft. This 32-inch LCD TV has two Freeview receivers as well as a 40GB hard drive for recording digital and anologue channels. And, like one of those annoying kids at school who could turn their hand to anything, the Humax LGB-32TPVR is also HD Ready and has a plethora of connections.
While the ability to record digital TV from one remote is a brilliant feature, picture quality from Freeview recordings on the LGB-32TPVR is poor, and only DVI and hi-def component inputs truly impress. There's an excellent provision of video connections for standard and high-definition sources, and we particularly love the ability to backup your recorded programmes to an external hard drive. If the recording features are the reason you're considering this set, then you'd be better off with a separate box -- 160GB models with three tuners can be bought for under £200 (including Humax's excellent PVR-9200T). Likewise, AV enthusiasts who already have a Freeview recorder or Sky+ box would be wise to invest in a higher-quality TV.
Design
The Humax LGB-32TPVR is a handsome LCD with a solid build quality. It comes complete with a desktop stand that keeps the TV low and stable, but it can be wall mounted (although the mount is sold separately). The package comes with two remote controls, one for simple operation and the other with more advanced recording controls. The smaller one wasn't included with our review sample, but the 'advanced' remote was terribly unwieldy -- about twice as long as it needs to be and with a strange balance that makes it uncomfortable to hold. Recording buttons are also inexplicably hidden underneath a panel. Why cover up one of the TV's most vital features?
Connectivity is housed on the back and side of the TV, with no covers to keep the sockets and protruding wires hidden. The back panel includes three Scart sockets, two of which are RGB-compatible for higher-quality pictures. Three Scart sockets are an excellent allocation for a flat-screen TV, and when you consider that the TV already has a Freeview recorder inside, it's unlikely that you'll need all of them. As well as this standard-definition connectivity, there's a digital video connection in the form of DVI, which can accept video from a PC or upcoming HD sources such as Sky HD and Blu-ray. The DVI socket is thankfully HDCP-enabled, and therefore Sky HD-compatible. There's also a VGA socket if your computer's graphic card predates the DVI era, or you could use it for Xbox 360 high-definition gaming with a VGA cable.
The back panel also has a couple of connections that you don't find on many LCDs -- USB 2.0 and RS-232. The first allows you to connect a USB hard drive and transfer recordings from the LG's internal hard drive, and the latter connects up to a home control system for access from a touch-screen pad. It's a high-end feature for home-cinema enthusiasts and therefore somewhat out of place on a budget LCD, but it's a welcome addition when companies such as Panasonic, Sony and Toshiba don't include it on their screens.
On the left side panel, the TV features component-video inputs, which are high-definition and progressive-scan compatible. Connect up a DVD player with the red, green and blue phono outputs and you'll get a solid, colourful picture from the Humax. You can connect an Xbox 360 this way, too. There are also composite and S-Video connections, but these are low-rent standards that produce poor results on a digital display. They're for use with camcorders or older games consoles only.
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