Typical price: £600
What is it: Classy 37-inch 1080p LCD TV
What we think: A nice design and some neat features add to its very good picture performance
Toshiba Regza 37XV505D Review
Reviewed on: 25 April 2008
Performance
Freeview is often the weakest link in the
performance chain. Here, the Toshiba does a brilliant job, clearing up
some of the horrible picture problems you so often see on large screen
TVs. We watched some of the usual daytime nonsense and despite the
abhorrent content, the picture actually looked pretty good. We did have
to muck about with the picture settings for some time to get the best
out of the TV, however. Once we'd done that, we were really happy with
the picture.
This is, as you would expect, carried over into the HD viewing experience. We found the picture here to be incredibly sharp, detailed and colourful. Inserting Resident Evil: Apocalypse into our Sony Blu-ray player (sorry, Toshiba) told us two things. First, Resident Evil: Apocalypse is like the encyclopaedia of rubbish film making, abysmal writing and horrible acting; second -- and perhaps more importantly -- the Toshiba can do a grand job with 1080p/24 material. Colours were rich but not overdone and film grain was successfully reduced by the Toshiba's built-in picture processing.
Setting the TV up was dead simple, too. On the initial power-up, the TV sniffs the airwaves for digital and analogue channels, and stores them quickly and without significant fuss. Once that's done, the EPG is simple to use and will guide you though the next eight days of TV. The TV will even tell you what programmes are just starting on Freeview channels -- a nice little feature.
The only real disappointment was the sound. We spent time tweaking and trying to get it sounding rich and natural, but we never quite got the sound to be perfect. One of the problems is the lack of bass. The slim case on this TV doesn't really allow for great low frequency speakers, so everything is on the weak side. The good news is you can plug in a subwoofer; this is quite possibly worth doing so the TV can concentrate on dialogue and effects -- the two things it did do well.
Conclusion
The 37XV505 does a great job of pretty much everything. The weakest
area is sound, which is thin. This is fine for most types of viewing,
but adding an external speaker system would really make all the
difference.
In terms of competitors, we'd pit against the incredible Panasonic Viera TH-37PX80B 37-inch plasma. Still, the Tosh holds its own, and is 1080p, which it can hold over the Panasonic.
Edited by Jason Jenkins
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
Others to consider
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 Toshiba Regza 37XV505D
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:









