Panasonic TH42PZ81B Launched

Update: Full testing of the Panasonic PZ81 series is now available at our TH50PZ81B review article.

Hot on the heels of the launch of Freesat, a UK free-to-air digital satellite television service featuring high definition channels, Panasonic have introduced their new PZ81 series of plasma HDTVs which sport a true HD native panel resolution of 1920 x 1080, “Intelligent Frame Creation” and “24p Real Cinema” motion-compensated frame interpolation (MCFI) technologies, 100Hz Double Scan, x.v.Colour extra wide colour gamut, and most importantly, inbuilt Freesat HD tuner.

Other special features include an SD card slot which can playback JPEG photos and AVCHD high definition camcorder movies, a tough front glass panel which is highly resistant to impacts and scratches, an ethernet LAN input port to connect to the internet for future service enhancements, and an optical audio output capable of passing Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound from suitable programmes.

Panasonic TH42PZ81B

At a press launch event held at the Abbey Road Studio in London yesterday, we had a brief look at the Panasonic TH42PZ81B plasma TV. Appearance-wise, the Panasonic TH42PZ81B closely resembles the PZ80 range with its glossy black bezel and wedge-shaped pedestal stand… the only major difference being that the front protrusion at the bottom of the television is mostly black rather than silver. At the middle of the protrusion lies a plastic flap that flips up to reveal some control buttons and connection inputs (including the third HDMI port).

Front connections

The Panasonic TH42PZ81B’s user menu is essentially the same as those implemented across their 2008 range of plasma televisions (there’s still no white balance controls available in the [Picture] submenu). In the [Setup] submenu, you can find a list of Freesat services:

Setup submenu Freesat services
Setup submenu Freesat Service List

Pressing the [Guide] button on the remote control will first bring up a list of available genres, from which you can then access the Freesat EPG:

Genre list EPG
Setup submenu Freesat Service List

Although we did not have the time nor the equipments to fully calibrate the Panasonic TH42PZ81B, black level, shadow detail and viewing angle were excellent, as could be expected from a Panasonic plasma. Colours appeared natural, and to our eyes greyscale looked consistent across the luminance range, with [Colour Balance] “Warm” possibly coming closest to the D65 standard.

Football in high definition

Even with [Intelligent Frame Creation] disabled, motion resolution was superb on the Panasonic TH42PZ81B from what we’d seen during the live BBC HD broadcast of the Euro 2008 football match between Spain and Russia. During medium-fast camera pans, the pitch-side advertisements remained largely legible instead of degrading into a mess of motion blurring witnessed on lesser flat screen HDTVs.

Verdict: Feature-wise a PZ85 plus Freesat HD tuner; performance-wise the TH42PZ81B will probably deliver all the key positive attributes befitting a Panasonic plasma: excellent blacks, revealing shadow detail, natural colours and fluid motion handling.

49 comments

  1. Hi,
    I heard some rumour tat you can get a 5 years warranty from Panasonic as special promo before end of July.
    Is that true? Can somebody confirm and give a link to that information?
    Thanks.

  2. Vincent,
    Is PZ81 same as PZ80 at SD? Is PZ81 better than PX80 at SD?
    Thanks

  3. Hi Juan!

    Yes – but I believe you have to visit a shop and sign a form to get the 5 yr warranty

    Cheers!

  4. Juan/The_Gooze

    I bought one today, as was blown away by the Picture. You DO get a free 5 year Warranty, however:

    1) This is a promotion, and is only running until31st July 2008. After that, it reverts to 12 Months

    2) You HAVE to watch a Demo in-store, and buy the Product the same day from that retailer.

    3) You HAVE to register the Product with Panasonic no later than 31st August 2008 to qualify. The onus is on YOU to do this, and not your Dealer.

    Hope that helps…..it’s an amazing Picture, that much I can assure you!

  5. Ordered mine from Dixons yesterday no 5 years warranty but was less than GBP1100. Will arrive next Tuesday. Hopefully Spain will defeat Italy and will enjoy the Euro semifinals in High Definition! :-D
    I just couldn’t wait for it to reach shops in my area which offer the 5 years warranty and also for the prices to go down.
    Chris, how much did you pay and where?
    Thans.

  6. 1099, including Dish installation. CF Lakes in Maidenehad….one of teh oldest Pan/Technics Dealers around….I’ve been buying kit from them since the mid-seventies!!

    Might be worth phgoning Panasonic in Bracknell and blagging a Warranty Registration Form, and getting it done retropecti vely, if you know what I mean….worth a try!

    I’m having it delivered tomorrow (Sat) between 9 and 11AM…Engineer is here at 2PM….watch this space for an updated review by teatime!!

  7. we didn’t have to sit through a demo, just walked into our local tv guys place and they delivered that afternoon, you have to send the original receipt with the 5 year warranty claim form, and it’s stamped by the retailer as well.

    I’m slightly disapointed with it’s upscaling of SD compared to our previous panel, but other than that a dam good buy.

  8. Bought one yesterday and have to say so far a little disappointed. The manual doesn’t say if you can connect an existing sky box which I have – so at the moment I am not sure if the set up is correct.
    As for the Freesat service – picture quality isn’t as good as normal sky but BBC HD is pretty good.

    FYI – bought from John Lewis who automaticaly give you a five year warranty

  9. “The manual doesn’t say if you can connect an existing sky box which I have – so at the moment I am not sure if the set up is correct.”

    you’ve lost me!? you can connect sky via HDMI/scart…which you appear to have done, so what do you mean by “I am not sure if the set up is correct”?

  10. Don’t worry too much about a 5-year warranty and NEVER buy an extended warranty. These are rip-offs, as under the Sale of Goods Act, all merchandise of this category must be deemd ‘fit for purpose’ for a period of SIX years from purchase. if a TV breaks down, threaten to take the retailer (not Panasonic) to the Small Claims Court on this legislation, most such cases succeed for the consumer. See http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2006/mar/25/consumernews.howtocomplain.

    Also Dixons online are offering this TV plus a BlueRay DVD player (normally £300+) for just over £1,000!

  11. Sorry guys, the Dixons quote was for a TH42PZ80B TV, not sure how it differs from the TH42PZ81 which is one digit higher (more recent version of the same model? the earlier one is Freesat ready also). http://www.dixons.co.uk:80/martprd/store/dix_page.jsp?BV_SessionID=@@@@0909083570.1214727989@@@@&BV_EngineID=ccddadeehjelhedcflgceggdhhmdgml.0&page=Product&fm=null&sm=null&tm=null&sku=638237&category_oid=-28723

  12. @PH.
    Every TV is freesat ready, there are no special TVs for Freesat.
    TH42PZ81B (B is also important becasue E model doesn’t) incorporate a HD Freesat tuner on the TV .
    The TH42PZ80B doesn’t. Also there are other differences.
    Panasonic should have named the 81, 86 better because it is more like the TH42PZ85B (plus the Freesat tuner)

  13. Is the 81B better/worse/same as the 85B as the only difference I can see is that you get freesat with hte 81B but the 81B costs £400 more than the 85B

  14. chris, £400 is a VERY extreme case – generally you can pick it up for £200(ish) more…the extra freatures are PiP and PaP (as well as freesat) also you have a LAN input for (I assume) future connectivity

  15. can someone help me out been looking to buy new tv for months .
    I had broken down my list to the samsung a656 and the sony w4000
    now i think the panasonic pz81 has confussed me .

    can some with the knowledge tell me which on to buy.
    the tv will be used for virgin media standard telly (hoping to get freesat soon) and xbox 360 gaming .

  16. I’ve had the 42PZ81B for a month now, but as it was the first LCD/Plasma I could live with, I haven’t got anything else to compare it with for you, except a 26″ CRT. The screen is huge by comparison.
    The greatest pleasure has been viewing Freesat HD TV from the BBC, especially the Olympics. This is what digital TV should have been like from the start. I keep switching to BBC HD just for the sheer pleasure of seeing the clarity of the picture. I found myself admiring the herring-bone pattern on a jacket, the other day. My wife switches to everything else.
    I get the impression that with lower bit rates, one sees softer images that need sharpening, and have to reduce other types of processing. Sometimes the freeview channels look better than the freesat SD ones. I can’t advise about full DVD: I run SD DVD through a Toshiba HD player scaled to 1080i, and this looks pretty OK when processed by the Panny.
    I’m looking forward to a Freesat recorder when it gets to market, and might get tempted by a Bluray player.
    Audio from the built-in speakers is crap, but processing SPDIF through a simple AV amp (I have an old Denon AVR1803 and some 2.1 home-made speakers), the result is very clean and the bass pretty powerful.
    While I criticise the softening of SD material, I suspect that I am put-off by the current crop of LCDs that expose the flaws of SD material on sharp displays. This Plasma is definitely something I can live with.

  17. quote PH

    “Don’t worry too much about a 5-year warranty and NEVER buy an extended warranty”

    PH do you have any original thought or do you regurgitate whatever you are told?

    Any flat screen tv is extremely expensive to repair, most repairs simply require a board change, problem is the boards are generally £150+ easily pushing repairs into the £250+ price bracket with labour and vat so to advise anyone not to worry about warrannties is irresponsbible and before you ask how I can be so sure bear this in mind. I have had 18 years experience in the Independent electrical retail trade and supervise daily repairs to flat screen tvs which exceed the costs I have detailed above.

  18. BOUGHT A PANASONIC 37″ PLASMA LAST YEAR AND NOW HAVE A LOVELY BLUE LINE DOWN IT…OUT OF GUARANTEE BUT DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT THERE OFFER OF A 5 YEAR WARRANTY WISH WE HAD THAT!!

  19. Antother silly review from HDTVTEST – out of scope – made for 1% of the market.

    95% of the HDTV viewers watch sat or cable TV, thus in 1080i. Very few have a blu-ray machine.

    So why this review using 1080p ??? – not a single word of how this TV performs with 1080i in, the test havnt even tried 1080i in ….. 1080i in is not a simple task, and not all HDTV handles this well.

  20. Dan, you cretin…. Ph point was that you can get repairs done FOR FREE up to 6 years after purchase- but people like you from the retail industry would like to conceal that fact- wonder why?

  21. ” what we’d seen during the live BBC HD broadcast of the Euro 2008 football match between Spain and Russia. ”

    – Spain kicked Russian ASS in that game!

  22. “Dan, you cretin…. Ph point was that you can get repairs done FOR FREE up to 6 years after purchase- but people like you from the retail industry would like to conceal that fact- wonder why”

    Sales og Goods Act is 6 months, not 6 years???

  23. can any confirm the TH42PZ81B has both PAP and PIP, i cant find a spec that shows it.

    thanks

  24. CM on 14 October 2008 11:19 pm

    “Dan, you cretin…. Ph point was that you can get repairs done FOR FREE up to 6 years after purchase- but people like you from the retail industry would like to conceal that fact- wonder why”

    Sales of Goods Act is 6 months, not 6 years???

    —————

    You’re both right. The sale of goods act is 6 months, but under the consumer act a product that doesn’t last for a reasonable time for which it was designed for ( 60000hrs is the figure they tout the screen for I bellieve?) must be replaced FOC. Yes, you would need to do it through the small claims court. But if you don’t mind the inconvenience the retailer would lose. I expect the retailer can then counter claim against hs supplier?

  25. The idiots mouthing off about theSale of Goods Act want to get their facts right!

    There is no automatic right to anything. The SoGA says that an item going faulty within 6 months of purchase is assumed to have been faulty from the start and it is up to the supplier to prove otherwise. You are NOT entitled to a free replacement and must accept a repair if this is offered. Items that develop a fault within a reasonable time from purchase (reasonable is not defined) can be returned for repair, replacement or refund.

    All goods or items must be “fit for purpose”, of merchantable quality” and “durable”. The MAXIMUM period for a claim is 6 years but in reality it depends on a reasonable life expectancy i.e. some items may only be expected to last 2 years without failure whereas others may be expected to last for ten years. Whatever the case, after the first 6 months it is up to the purchaser to prove that the item is not durable or had an inherent fault.

    I suggest you read the Sale of Goods Act.

  26. I am going to buy a panasonic tv dont know much about them but the price appeals looking for 42″ would you recommend PX80B or PZ81B whats main difference (make it simple)

  27. Well I bought my 42″ set on the 25th Oct.
    I had been looking at the Sony KDL40W4500, but there have been many threads on “clouds” and “mura” with there LCD panel, the Samsung uses the same panel also.
    I feel the bigger LCD’s are not there yet!!
    I did not have a Sky dish, so I bought and erected it myself on Saturday, we watched the new Sharp series I was blown away, the picture is fantastic!!
    Did not go for the five extended warranty as it has to be “fit for purpose”, I paid £865GBP having done an internet check on the deals out there.
    I went to a shop that had them in stock and would price match any genuine deal.
    I am looking forward to the extra channels that will be added in the coming weeks/ months.

  28. “cmf on 4 August 2008 4:53 pm can someone help me out been looking to buy new tv for months .
    I had broken down my list to the samsung a656 and the sony w4000
    now i think the panasonic pz81 has confussed me .

    can some with the knowledge tell me which on to buy.
    the tv will be used for virgin media standard telly (hoping to get freesat soon) and xbox 360 gaming . ”

    I’ve also been looking for a couple of months and narrowed it down to the same 3 as cmf. Also using it for virgin media standard tv and 360 gaming. cmf – which tv did you end up going for and would you recommend it?

    If anyone else could share thier views on this it would be greatly appreciated!!

  29. Just got the TH-42PZ81D from John Lewis, £899 with 5 year gaurantee and free delivery…only gripe so far is that I can’t find out how to output sound via the optical link to my home cinema system…very frustrating but hope Panasonic will reply soon!

  30. i have just got a th-42pz81b and am disappointed whith the contrast, the picture is quite dark and is like whatching everthing in twilight . can anyone help

  31. Ive been looking at getting the th-42pz81b, why is it comet and john lewis have just added £100 to the price, thought we were in a crisis.
    Spoze its so they can drop it £100 in jan and everyone thinks there gettig a bargin.

  32. We got a THPZ81B about three weeks ago. We upgraded from an old Panasonic 32″ CRT (remember this).

    While I can’t really fault the product visually, sonically it’s a bit of a let down, but that said, the one thing that’s driving me nuts is the aspect ratio setting. We tend to watch everything off a Sky+ box (via SCART), or the built-in Freesat receiver. We’ve left the TV on the AUTO setting, which is fine when the sky box feeds it a wide signal (it switches to wide/16:9 automatically), but when switching to a 4:3 broadcast (ie Discovery/240) the TV struggles to handle the input – it jumps around quite a bit and doesn’t really stabilise.

    Our old TV had a JUST setting (as well as a similar Auto setting) – the JUST setting cropped and stretched a 4:3 input and gave a stable image, but sadly the JUST setting isn’t an option on the PZ81. I’ve e-mailed Panasonic. there must be quite a few people who are having the same issue and maybe it can be sorted by a software upgrade.

    Incidentally, the TV cost £899 from John Lewis, with a 5-year warranty. I just saw that JL are selling the same set for £999 now.

    Best
    P

  33. I was looking to order a Panasonic TH42PZ81B from John Lewis and disappointed about the sudden price increase. I have a sky + system at the moment do i need the intergrated Freeview or could i get a lower spec Panasonic and still get HD?

  34. I am thinking of purchasing the TH42PZ81B however according to the Which guide for best plasma TVs, this model is not in their “best buys”. They criticise both the picture quality and sound referring to a fan noise which can be heard.
    They recommend the old PX models which are cheaper and better quality

    Can anyone shed some light on this especially picture quality?

  35. I too can’t believe the recent price hikes on all the Panny range; both ‘px’ and ‘pz’ variants have shot up by around £100! As ‘Hods’ said above, it’s probably to give us a false ‘discount’ in the Jan sales!!
    To ‘Kevin’, what did Which? make of the other pz Panasonics: mainly the 85 and 800, without the Freesat? Personally, I was thinking of buying the pz85 and getting a separate HD box at some point in the future. That way I would be able to record the HD channels, rather than just have them only available on the tv tuner. (mind you, can u record HDtv programs with a Panasonic HDD/DVD recorder?) All I’m not sure about is whether the 85 has the V-real pro 3 or the older version 2, and whether it would make any visible difference anyway? (I know the 85 also doesn’t have pip, but I’ve managed to survive without that so far!!)
    Saw the 85 next to the 81 in local Comet and i’ve got to say the 85 was a better picture, although it may just have been the way they’d set them up?! Sound is supposed to be better on the 85 too. pz800 supposed to be best but a lot more money; dont really think it’s worth the extra dosh.
    Current tv is the Panny 29″ crt with Dolby Pro-logic surround; damn good set!!
    Cheers all, and thank you Vincent for the reviews.

  36. I owned a Panasonic TH42PZ81B for exactly 2 weeks and sent it back again!
    WHY? because I could not stand the constant ‘whirring’ of the 5 cooling fans needed to keep it cool.
    Every time the sound in a program or film went quiet or there is a pause in dialogue all you could hear was the fans, any quiet moments are ruined.
    I contacted Panasonic who told me that this is NORMAL??????
    It wasn’t just me either, in case you are wondering, on the first day we owned it my wife thought a bus was outside the house the fans where that loud. One good point was that it is so annoying it drove my 14 y/o daughter back to her own bedroom TV ;-).
    Great picture with very annoying cooling fan noise!

  37. I am thinking of purchasing the TH42PZ81B but i need to know if it realy has 50/50 picture in picture. the one i looked at in comets the assistant could get 50% width but not the full height

  38. I’ve had one of these for a while now, purchased for £970 with stand + 5yr from a Panasonic Dealer and I have to say it’s one of the best purchases I’ve made.

    To address specific concerns raised, I can detect no fan noise at all (I sit about 7 feet away). Really, none at all. The fact people are even complaining about it suggests to me that maybe they’ve been quieted in a more recent production run or something?

    Standard def looks absolutely sublime as far as I’m concerned. I’ve not got a lot to compare it too but it’s nice and sharp. Less noticeable artefacts than a 32″ Samsung I used to watch from about 10 feet away. Pretty subjective and ill informed comments, I realise, but I’m an average joe like most people who might read this….

    In-built speakers are crap as per the review, but it got hooked up to my sound system immediately so not an issue for me.

    My only real disappointment is that I can’t get 1080p through VGA, though I’m not sure if this is a technical limitation or not….just a personal disappointment.

    Also, it bugs me that I can’t “integrate” DVB and Freesat into the same channel listing…i.e. switch immediately from a freeview channel to BBC HD. I have to switch source first…this might be possible though, I’ve not had a play.

    Anyway, I’d recommend this to anybody in a second, and have done.

  39. I bought the near equivalent of this t.v a time ago.i am really impressed with picture quality but i am worried about pictures settings,particulary the colour wich accorind to vincent tend to show a lot of red and cartoonish greens.what can i do about this?i know how to enter the service menu but i am worried about braking the t.v.can anaybody give me the service menu settings so i can reach a more D65 picture?please?i would really apreciat that.also do i need to do anything else besides changing to cinema and warm preset?do i need to increase,decrease the brightness or contrast of this t.v other then default values?

  40. Phil on 21 October 2008 6:39 pm The idiots mouthing off about theSale of Goods Act want to get their facts right!

    There is no automatic right to anything. The SoGA says that an item going faulty within 6 months of purchase is assumed to have been faulty from the start and it is up to the supplier to prove otherwise. You are NOT entitled to a free replacement and must accept a repair if this is offered. Items that develop a fault within a reasonable time from purchase (reasonable is not defined) can be returned for repair, replacement or refund.

    All goods or items must be “fit for purpose”, of merchantable quality” and “durable”. The MAXIMUM period for a claim is 6 years but in reality it depends on a reasonable life expectancy i.e. some items may only be expected to last 2 years without failure whereas others may be expected to last for ten years. Whatever the case, after the first 6 months it is up to the purchaser to prove that the item is not durable or had an inherent fault.

    I suggest you read the Sale of Goods Act.

    Amy on 27 October 2008 1:27 pm

    Thanks Phil, spot on above, the sale of goods act is incredibly spurious and open to interpretation but then its always easy to repeat something you have heard from somone in the pub after all thats why most people believe that you have to re gas a plasma.

  41. Personal experience of the sales of goods act working in my favour a few years back. Bought a Tosh flagship 32″ TV in 1998 and also a 4 year mastercare policy as part of the bargain. In the TV’s 5th year out of any guarantee the Tube went, a private TV engineer advised me of the Sale of goods act and told me that since the TV of that price/quality should reasonably have expected to last me some time and certainly longer than I had it that it was inherently faulty at the point of purchase and a design fault, he also told me that that TV used a Philips tube and Philips sources some cheap parts from the far east. The replacement tube would not suffer the same fate. So I wrote a letter to Currys explaining my POV and backed it up with sale of goods act and a few phrases above. They agreed to send me a cheque for the full cost of repair from the TV engineer but as a consequence disowned any future issues I had with the set. As it happens it has still not put a foot wrong and is a very good TV hence why I am still here window shopping at the great TV’s out today but cannot bring myself to spend and part with what is still doing its job well.

    The sales of goods act works but it is the consumer’s problem to prove fault which can be tricky. This applies to anything that doesn’t suffer wear and tear which is a great get out for the store of car dealership.

  42. Bought the PZ800, which I believe is quite similar to the ones discussed above. COOLING FANS: No problem, you have to put your head behind the TV to hear them, and then only if it’s quiet in the room. SD digital signals are OK if you don’t sit too close. HD and BluRay: Great picture. DOWNSIDE: Reviews say excellent black levels. That may be the case, it’s my first flatscreen, but with a dark image with low contrast, the black appears the grey it actually is. This is irritating in many movies with night scenes or dark indoor scenes. The illusion of deep black gives way to flat foreground greys. However, as far as I can ascertain, you will have to get a 50″ Pioneer or an expensive 46″ or 55″ Samsung 9 series to fulfil the dream of “real black”. Arny.

  43. I have a 42 PZ81B and whilst the picture quality is good, its not perfect. I have played around with the contrast brightness sharpness and colour but don’t really know what I’m doing. I’m not getting any pixelation, but images a slightly blurred which the sharpness does rectify without altering something else. Perhaps its a combination of everthing? Please could someone who has a perfect (if this exists) pitcure please post all their settings and anything else that I should change in the picture menu? Thanks.

  44. ooops:

    but images a slightly blurred which the sharpness does NOT rectify without altering something else.

  45. I have the 42PZ81B and found the picture soft on SD images coming from a sky hd box.

    HD pictures are amazing though. The issue is that if you don’t want pixelation you get soft pictures and vice versa.

    In the end I got a DVDO Edge video processor and now the image is perfect. The edge upscales to 1080p and does a great job on the SD pictures. this is one of the only HD (42″) that I have seen that you can watch less than 6 feed from the screen and the image is perfect. Note it does depend on the bit rate the broadcaster sends – some of the odder sky channels are not great but still watchable.

    Anyway from the colour/contrast on the TV an the processor I can say this is an excellent combination. And still cost me under €1500!!! Can say the picture is much better than the Sony Z series (parents have that) and cost considerably less. And you get Freesat, analogue and digital terrestial in the bundle.

    Regards

  46. Ideal Picture settings for 42PZ81B:

    Brightness: 31/63
    Contrast: 56/63
    Colour: 29/63
    Picture profile: Normal
    Sharpness: 4/6
    Colour balance: Cool
    Colour management: Off
    P-NR: Off
    Picture overscan: On
    Intelligent frame creation: Off

  47. Aspect ration on Panasonic or any tv is no at fault. Those using sky cable should select 16.9 from aspect button and not auto. Also ensure you have same on sky system/picture setting to 16.9 wide. For cable choose wide option. V+ customers should choose hi-def then 720 wide or 1080 wide as long as you are connected via HDMI lead. I get many of customers calling about it saying it’s doing their headin! No need for software upgrade or panasonic support. Just come back here!

  48. Why no itv iPlayer? ?