LG SL9000 (42SL9000) review

Our rating

4.0 stars out of 5

User rating

2.5 stars out of 5

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Verdict

The LG 42SL9000 looks great and offers a solid feature set, but its performance falls a notch or two short of the best that the LED TV world currently has to offer. As a result, its price looks rather steep

Good

  • Gorgeous and remarkably slim design
  • Good pictures
  • Loads of features
  • Excellent operating system

Bad

  • One or two colour problems
  • Black levels are nothing special by LED standards
  • Motion isn't particularly well handled

In this review

LG's 42-inch, 1080p 42SL9000 LCD TV isn't just thin -- it's really, really thin, measuring about 29mm at its deepest point. That means it's just as slender as the ground-breaking and popular B7000 and B8000 TVs from Samsung. The LED-edge-lit 42SL9000 can be picked up for around £1,200. 

Skinny like a model
Although the 42SL9000's astonishingly slender dimensions mean it cuts its most dramatic dash if viewed from the side, it's also mighty handsome when ogled from the front. The glossy black bezel and screen both share a single sheet of glass -- a clever touch that oddly exaggerates the set's thinness. There's an appealing infusion of grey along the extreme bottom edge of the bezel too.

The set's connections are quite plentiful, including four HDMI sockets, a USB port capable of playing JPEG, MP3 and DivX standard- or high-definition files, and an RS-232 port so the TV can be integrated into a wider control system. There's even a further connection you can't see: wireless Bluetooth, either for playing files via Bluetooth phones, or listening to the TV through Bluetooth headphones.

Connection-wise, the only disappointments are that there's no Ethernet port for connecting the TV to a PC or any online services, and that most of the set's connections stick out from the back. That negates the TV's slenderness to some extent if you're hanging it on a wall.

Lighting on the edge
The 42SL9000 sports LED edge lights. An array of LED light sources, ranged around the bezel, fire light across the back of the screen, and the light is then bounced out to the viewer by an array of tiny mirrors.


The 42SL9000 is remarkably thin, and it doesn't look too shabby when viewed from the front either

Using edge-mounted LEDs, rather than ones mounted directly behind the screen, means the 42SL9000 has no local-dimming capability, whereby each LED array used to illuminate the picture can be individually controlled, resulting in a greater contrast range. But the 42SL9000 still claims a huge contrast ratio of 3,000,000:1, and, as we've seen with Samsung's LED-edge-lit models, not having local-dimming capability certainly doesn't mean pictures can't be very good indeed.

The 42SL9000 sports LG's 100Hz TruMotion processing, and a seriously long list of picture options, so that you can make your images look perfect. Among the highlights of these tweaks -- all contained within a series of extremely attractive and logically organised on-screen menus -- are dynamic colour and contrast modes, a gamma-adjustment and noise-reduction system, and the option to adjust the level of -- or deactivate -- the TV's 100Hz and Real Cinema motion-compensation elements.

As usual with LG TVs, the 42SL9000 is so flexible that it's been endorsed by the Imaging Science Foundation. Two presets are included for use by an ISF agent, so that they can calibrate the screen for you.

Intense images
On first impressions, the 42SL9000's pictures are very good. The image looks exceptionally bright and this helps colours look fearsomely intense, especially if you use the TV's wide-colour-gamut mode. Also helping colours look richer is the 42SL9000's likeable black-level response. The set's blacks are deeper than those of most LCD TVs that use an ordinary CCFL backlight, rather than an LED system.

Another, more surprising, strength of the 42SL9000 is its handling of standard-definition pictures, which look sharper than is often the case with 1080p screens, while also enjoying some of the better noise-reduction processing we've seen.

User reviews1

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gadget123's avatar
2.5 stars out of 5

gadget123 16 December 2009

Good: slim line , glass borderless outlook

Bad: the lack of depth in colours , although it claims to be high contrast

Comment: The overall outlook is good , modern classy finishing,
yet dissapointment comes from the picture quality that compares to other led lit tv like the samsung 7000, the black level not really impressive though it claims 3000000 : 1 . greylish black level. the input was direct from the back, leaving a big space to mount , make it slim yet fat on wall mount. so entirely if its on a table stand should be decent.
no local dimming , not realli attractive for some high end model
if its going to be a low price tag , then its worth considering.
not really impressed by the colour tone and black level.

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