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Philips 42PFL6188S Review

Sections

Verdict

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Pros

  • Good 2D and 3D picture quality
  • Sleek design
  • Decent audio

Cons

  • Sluggish and underpopulated Smart TV system
  • Black levels can be bettered if you spend more
  • Needs lots of TLC with its set up

Key Specifications

  • Review Price: £850.00
  • 42-inch LCD TV with edge LED lighting
  • Smart TV online system
  • multimedia playback via USB and DLNA
  • passive 3D playback with 4 pairs of glasses included
  • Ambilight

What is the Philips 42PFL6188S?

At first, the Philips 42PFL6188S is a bit of a mystery. After a little delving, however , it turns out that the 42PFL6188S is a close relative of the PFL6008 series but designed expressly for ‘independent’ distribution channels, offering more powerful sound, more powerful motion processing and an extra two pairs of ‘gaming glasses’.

What’s more, it offers these extras all for the same money as the
Philips 42PFL6008. Which means it clearly has the potential to be an even better
mid-range option.

Not what you’re looking for? Head to our best TV round-up.

Philips 42PFL6188Philips 42PFL6188S slim smart LED TV on stand

Philips 42PFL6188S: Design & Connections

Aesthetically the Philips 42PFL6188S is pleasing enough. Its well-built black frame is on trend with its skinny width, and it expands cutely along the bottom edge where your eye then runs down to the set’s sultry metallic, open-framed desktop stand.

This being a Philips TV, there’s also Ambilight to consider, which casts the familiar pools of coloured light from the TV’s left and right edges. You can opt to have this coloured light match with a startlingly degree of colour and location accuracy the colour content of the image you’re watching.

People who prefer their TVs to blend into the background might think Ambilight sounds hideous. But actually it can increase your immersion in what you’re watching while also making the viewing experience more relaxing – so long, at least, as you make sure the feature is set to a relatively gentle level of ‘dynamism’.

Hooking our test sources up to the Philips 42PFL6188S reveals a pleasingly comprehensive array of connections for the set’s £850 price point. These include four HDMIs, three USBs for playback of photo/music/video multimedia files from USB storage devices, and built-in Wi-Fi for either streaming multimedia from DLNA PCs or going online with Philips’ latest Smart TV platform.

Philips 42PFL6188S: Smart TV

Despite having checked this system out thoroughly in our Philips Smart TV review, we gave it another spin on the Philips 42PFL6188S to see if anything had significantly improved/changed. But unfortunately it hadn’t.

The familiar problems – a very sluggish and rather dated looking menu system, a dearth of really useful video content providers (all that will interest most people, really, are the BBC iPlayer, YouTube, Blinkbox, and Netflix), and highlights/recommendations systems currently hamstrung by the shortage of services they currently integrate.

There are one or two good points too, such as the provision of a full
QWERTY keyboard on the rear of the remote and a Twitter app that
automatically searches for hashtag timelines connected with whatever
programme you’re watching. But these are rather trivial positives in the
context of the platform’s overall appeal.
Philips 42PFL6188Smart TV App Gallery interface on Philips 42PFL6188S screen.

Philips 42PFL6188S vs Philips 42PFL6008

As noted earlier, the 42PFL6118S is an unusual variant, so it’s worth looking more closely at the differences between the 42PFL6188S and the next model in Philips’ line-up, the 42PFL6008.

The model we’re testing here sports a 700Hz ‘Perfect Motion Rate’ versus the 500Hz of the earlier-tested model. Its audio output is 4W higher as well, while retaining the rear-mounted bass woofer also sported by the 42PFL6008.

When it comes to the extra glasses, the 42PFL6188S adds two pairs of ‘two-player gaming glasses’ with which two different players can take advantage of the twin-stream aspect of 3D playback to enjoy simultaneous full screen gaming. This clever idea comes with some strings attached in terms of the reduced resolution of the full-screen image each player gets, but it’s still a concept likely to gain more traction in the years to come.

If you want to use the TV’s passive 3D system for actual 3D viewing, you’re provided with four pairs of glasses for that.

All things considered, the Philips 42PFL6188S appears to be the better deal considering both sell for the same price.

We test every TV we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Used as the main TV for the review period

Tested for more than a week

Tested using industry calibrated tools, discs and with real world use

Tested with broadcast content (HD/SD), video streams and demo discs

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