Typical price: £1,800
What is it: Full HD 56-inch rear-projection TV
What we think: An occasionally great but ultimately flawed TV made more appealing by very low price
JVC HD-56ZR7J Review
Reviewed on: 31 October 2007
For many home cinema fans, the barrier to owning a really big screen is cost, not space. So on the surface at least, the rear-projection JVC HD-56ZR7J seems to have a huge amount of potential.
After all, how many flat TVs are there out there offering 56 inches of pictures for under £1,800? Exactly.
Strengths
Even though this is a rear-projection TV, it doesn't look like one. The rear is pretty slim by rear-pro standards and the design cunningly gives the impression that there's actually no rear at all.
Inside the 56ZR7J resides a proprietary JVC technology called the Direct-drive Image Light Amplifier (D-ILA). This is a refinement of the more widely used Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCoS) technology, with the advantages of being able to use very small pixels to reduce visible gaps in the image and produce deeper black levels.
Helping the D-ILA system hopefully deliver on its promise, meanwhile, is JVC's usually respectable DynaPix image-processing system, which, among other things, boosts fine detail levels and improves contrast handling.
When it's firing on all cylinders with some tasty HD source material, the D-ILA/DynaPix combination produces formidable results. Particularly remarkable is how scintillatingly sharp high-definition pictures can look, with levels of detail that not only shows off the HD glories of pristine Blu-ray transfers such as Casino Royale, but actually reveal some subtleties in the image that we hadn't noticed before.
It does no harm in this regard, of course, that the 56ZR7J sports a 'Full HD' pixel count of 1,920x1,080, enabling it to show the top-notch 1080p format.
The set's colours, meanwhile, thanks to an exceptionally high brightness output by rear-pro standards, are vibrant and strong, but also unusually expressive, natural and subtly blended.
Finally in the plus column, the speakers in this TV are sensational, with the sort of power, dynamic range and clarity most rivals can only dream about.
Weaknesses
This is the first D-ILA rear-pro TV JVC has made, so it's perhaps inevitable that there are one or two teething problems. These start with the fact that JVC has only provided one HDMI input, which just isn't enough in these days of Sky HD receivers and HD DVD and Blu-ray players.
It's also slightly disappointing that the TV doesn't carry more user-friendly features. There isn't even a built-in digital tuner, for heaven's sake!
And then there are a couple of picture deficiencies to report. First and worst, the set's black level response is pretty uninspiring, leaving dark scenes such as Superman's night-time tour of Metropolis with Lois Lane looking rather grey and flat.
Secondly, standard definition pictures can look fizzy -- a problem which can also even affect HD if you're not very careful with the TV's DigiPure auto-contrast system. We'd recommend leaving it set to 'Low' if you know what's good for you...
Conclusion
Although it's certainly flawed, there's enough good stuff going on with the 56ZR7J's pictures to convince us that D-ILA rear-pro technology definitely has a future. Especially when it can produce a screen size as big as 56 inches while costing far less -- around £1,800 -- than the same size would cost you with flat TV technology.
Edited by Jason Jenkins
Additional editing by Jon Squire
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the JVC HD-56ZR7J
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Television Reviews
LG SL9000 (42SL9000)
Good but not great. It's not quite up there with the best of the LED-edge-lit competition
Philips 9000 (47PFL9664H/12)
Beautiful styling, superlative performance and an endless feature set make for a truly premium experience
Sony Bravia Z5800 (KDL-40Z5800)
Sony's first freesat set is one of the best-performing TVs we've seen from the company so far
Toshiba Regza SV (46SV685DB)
It's a very good TV indeed, but we're not convinced the price is justified
on Televisions
freesat iPlayer beta service imminent
It's not much of a secret that iPlayer was going to turn up on freesat at some point. The good news is, we now know there will be a beta program run at the end of November
More:








