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Sony KDL-46S2010 46in LCD TV Review

Author John Archer
Published 13th Jan 2007
Manufacturer Sony
Price £1,207.83 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £1,389.00 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price
Design & Features Score 8 for Design & Features
Image Quality Score 8 for Image Quality
Sound Quality Score 8 for Sound Quality
Value Score 10 for Value
Overall Score 8 for Overall
Sony KDL-46S2010 46in LCD TV
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With Sony expected to launch a new, updated range of LCD TVs any day now, something rather splendid is happening to the brand’s current range. Basically, they’re having their prices slashed. And when we say slashed, we mean slashed. For having once being yours only if you could find the princely sum of £2,200, Sony’s 46S2010 is now available for just £1,389 – a price fall of nearly a grand, and one which makes the 46S2010 one of the cheapest 46in TVs ever. So if it can deliver the same sort of image quality witnessed on numerous other models in Sony’s current Bravia range, it could just be one of the biggest LCD bargains ever. Fingers crossed…

Aesthetically the 46S2010 is sort of OK looking. Its dark grey colour scheme feels old school without being hip, and its matt, distinctly plasticky finish feels uncharacteristically cheap for a Sony TV. Somehow, though, its sheer size sort of carries the day.


Connectivity has a nasty surprise up its sleeve: only one HDMI. We guess this limited digital video support is just about defensible on a TV with such a deflated price – but before we’re too generous to Sony, let’s not forget that this set was once well over two grand, and at that sort of level one HDMI just isn’t enough.

Elsewhere the 46S2010 manages to tick most of the key connection boxes, including a component video input for analogue HD sources like the Xbox 360, a VGA PC input, a couple of Scarts, and those rubbish composite and S-Video connections manufacturers still seem to think we want.

In terms of other key specifications, the screen boasts a native resolution of 1,366 x 768 – down from the full HD 1,920 x 1,080 offering of Sony’s X Series screens, but fair enough for £1,389 - and certainly enough to win the set its HD Ready badge of honour. The set also sports a digital tuner, backed up by both a slot for adding payTV subscription cards and a comprehensive 7-day electronic programme guide (EPG). This EPG comes complete with the facility to set recordings just by highlighting programmes on its listings.

It’s also pleasing to find that even though the ‘S’ part of the 46S2010’s name signifies that it lies towards the bottom of Sony’s current range, it still carries two key new Sony technologies: Super Vertical Pattern Alignment (SPVA) and Bravia Engine.


In case you’re not familiar with these from previous reviews, SPVA involves using angled sub-sections in each LCD pixel to ensure their light is distributed over a wider area so that the screen can be watched from a much wider viewing angle. And the Bravia Engine is a new proprietary image processing system – the first Sony’s developed exclusively for LCD TVs – that works to produce better colour tones and blends; improve contrast and noise reduction; and keep all image scaling entirely in the digital domain for better clarity and less interference.

Other tricks tucked away inside the 46S2010’s onscreen menus include a backlight adjuster, an unusual horizontal and vertical image shift section should you find that a source doesn’t align itself quite correctly on the screen, a contrast booster, a tool for reducing the blockiness caused by MPEG decoding artefacts, and adjustments for the set’s gamma levels.

 

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