Sony KDL40Z4500 Review

In Sony’s efforts to expand their LCD TV empire by catering to buyers with different requirements and budgets, they have come up with more range and models of Bravia LCD televisions than you can shake a stick at. We have tested the latest W4500 series, and are waiting for the imminent X4500 series to hit the stores, but where does the Z4500 series – unveiled at IFA 2008 as the world’s first 200Hz LCD HDTV – fit into the picture (no pun intended)? Today we’re going to have a look at the Sony KDL40Z4500 and find out…

Note: The specific model we tested was the Sony KDL40Z4500U (which denotes the 3-pin-plug United Kingdom version), but the terms KDL40Z4500 and KDL40Z4500U will be used interchangeably throughout this review.

Design

The Sony KDL40Z4500 HDTV reprises the “Midnight Sky” theme previously seen on the W4000 series: its glossy black bezel is sprinkled with sparkly flecks which become visible upon closer inspection. A thin pane of transparent perspex extends below the bezel frame to carry a horizontal speaker bar spanning the width of the LCD TV, creating a distinctly Sony-esque “suspended-in-air” effect.

Sony KDL40Z4500

The illuminated Sony logo, the backlit touch-sensitive control buttons at the bottom right of the panel, and the LED indicators embedded on the glass-like perspex are no doubt swanky touches. But Sony have also not forgotten the practical side of things, judging from the inclusion of a pair of recessed handgrips at the back of the television to facilitate easier lifting onto the swivelling pedestal stand.

Bezel, LED indicators, speaker
Midnight Sky bezel, transparent perspex, horizontal speaker bar

The chassis of the Sony KDL40Z4500 is bulkier and heavier than the W4000 and W4500 series. While this was probably necessary to accommodate the extra motion-enhancing gadgetry, the Sony KDL40Z4500 can look cumbersome when pitted against slim-profile LCD televisions which are increasingly popular with manufacturers and consumers alike.

Connections

Connectivity on the Sony KDL40Z4500 is no different from that on the W4500, featuring 3 instead of 4 HDMI inputs, a USB 2.0 port, a DLNA-compatible ethernet port, and a Digital Media Port among other standard connection interfaces.

Rear connections on Sony KDL40Z4500
Rear: 2 x HDMI, VGA, component, 2 x Scarts, aerial, LAN port, DM port, audio outs
Side connections
CI slot, USB, HDMI, composite video, headphone

Operation

The Sony KDL40Z4500 LCD HDTV sports the same user menu and EPG (both the standard Sony and the alternative Guide Plus+ versions) found on the W4500 series.

Remote control

Just like the television panel, the bundled infrared remote control is chunkier, no thanks to some extra buttons at the top of the remote which can be used to control other compatible equipments. Another ergonomic blunder is how some important buttons encircle the central navigation keypad, which means that some conscious effort, precision and dexterity are required to avoid hitting the wrong key. On the plus side, pressing a button on the top left of the remote control will light the keys up with neon blue glow to save you from fumbling in the dark.

Calibration

Given the continued omission of white balance controls at user-menu level even for a high-end model like the Sony KDL40Z4500, it’s hardly surprising to find that its post-calibration charts and measurements are very similar to the W4000 and W4500 series. [Colour Temperature] “Warm 2” was plus-red relative to D65:

Warm2 CCT
[Colour Temperature] “Warm 2” CCT
Warm2 RGB Tracking
[Colour Temperature] “Warm 2” RGB Tracking
[Colour Temperature] “Warm 1” was plus-blue:

Warm1 CCT
[Colour Temperature] “Warm 1” CCT
Warm1 RGB Tracking
[Colour Temperature] “Warm 1” RGB Tracking
[Colour Space] “Standard” yielded accurate primary chromaticities:

[Colour Space] Standard
[Colour Space] “Standard” CIE chart with reference to HD Rec. 709
[Colour Space] “Wide” resulted in an extended colour gamut with oversaturated green, which was further exaggerated by [Live Colour]:

[Colour Space] Wide [Live Colour] High
[Colour Space] “Wide” CIE [Live Colour] “High” CIE

Benchmark Test Results

Dead pixels None
Screen uniformity No clouding and backlight bleed if calibrated
Overscanning on HDMI 0% with [Display Area] set to “Full Pixel
Blacker than black Passed
Black level Excellent (0.06 cd/m2 calibrated)
Black level retention Stable
Primary chromaticity Excellent with [Colour Space] “Standard
Scaling Above average
Video mode deinterlacing Average; limited jaggies reduction
Film mode deinterlacing Poor; Failed 3:2/ 2:2 cadences in 480i/ 576i
Viewing angle 75°
Motion resolution [Motionflow] “Standard” and “Max“: 1080; “Min“: 750; “Off“: 300
Digital noise reduction Acceptable at baseline
Sharpness Undefeatable edge enhancement on 1080i/1080p
1080p/24 capability (PS3) Accepts 1080p/24 video signal; no telecine judder
Input lag 0-10ms in [Game Mode] or over VGA; 16-31ms otherwise

Power Consumption

Default ([Picture Mode] “Standard“) 164 watts
Calibrated ([Picture Mode] “Cinema“) 111 watts
Standby 14 watts with [Quick Start] engaged; <1 watt otherwise

Notes On 200Hz LCD Panel

Sony probably needed to use a slightly different LCD panel for a problem-free implementation of its 200Hz Motionflow system, and various characteristics of the screen certainly gave this away. Even out-of-the-box, we immediately noticed less clouding and backlight bleed on the Sony KDL40Z4500 HDTV than on the W4000 or W4500 series. The Sony KDL40Z4500’s edge in screen uniformity was also maintained off-axis, though it must be pointed out that its contrast and colour washed out slightly earlier than the W4000 and W4500 when viewed from an angle.

Although the dynamic contrast of the Sony KDL40Z4500 was quoted at 80,000:1 (vs. the 50,000:1 of W4500), the native contrast of the LCD panel actually measured marginally lower. Dispensing with any contrast enhancing gimmickry (which boosts top-end brightness and/or blacks at the expense of highlight and/or shadow detail), the deepest black level we could achieve after calibration was 0.06 cd/m2 – which of course is still excellent for an LCD TV – if we did not want to sacrifice peak brightness too much. At the other end of the spectrum, highlight detail and red channel started clipping pretty early when we gradually increased the [Contrast] value, effectively holding us back from raising the ceiling of the television’s dynamic range.

Without engaging [Motionflow], baseline motion resolution on the Sony KDL40Z4500 HDTV was measured to be 300 according to Chapter 31 of the “FPD Benchmark Software For Professional” test disc. Setting [Motionflow] to “Standard” was enough to boost motion resolution to 1080, the highest we’ve ever recorded on an LCD television. Even the “Min” setting delivered a motion resolution of 750 – surpassing all other LCD TVs we’ve tested to date – though the image did seem less stable (the scrolling lines flickered more) compared to either “Standard” or “Max“.

As expected, there’s no improvement in the quality of video processing on the Sony KDL40Z4500 compared to the W4500 according to our benchmark tests, as both employ the Bravia Engine 2 (BE2).

Picture Quality

High Definition (Blu-Ray)

Just like the W4500 (and the W4000 before it), the Sony KDL40Z4500 LCD HDTV turned in a breathtaking high-def performance underpinned by excellent blacks and colour fidelity, depicting the dreary darkness and the intentionally desaturated colour palette in Underworld on Blu-ray with convincing accuracy. And even though none of the colour temperature presets yielded D65 greyscale, we still managed to appreciate the blue tint deployed extensively throughout the film.

Kate Beckinsale

Perhaps because of the slightly different LCD panel used, calibrated gamma was 2.1 on the Sony KDL40Z4500 (it was 2.25 on the W4500), and unfortunately no gamma control was available in the user menu to bring this closer to spec. While videophiles may lament the brighter (maybe a touch too bright) shadow detail and marginally reduced punchiness/ “pop” compared to the 2.2 ideal, at least all the subtleties in the darkest crevices in Underworld were portrayed clearly for all to see.

Animated movies can provide a stern test for motion-compensated frame interpolation (MCFI) algorithms due to their digitally-rendered textures and lighting effects, and what better film than the absolutely flawless (in terms of picture and audio quality) Blu-ray transfer of Kung Fu Panda to grill the Sony KDL40Z4500’s 200Hz Motionflow system.

Kung Fu Panda

The Sony KDL40Z4500 passed the test with flying colours: we genuinely did not witness any interpolation artefacts throughout the movie with [Motionflow] set to “Min“. This setting was sufficient to improve clarity during medium-fast pans (for example when Shifu surveyed the courtyard at around the 51:57 mark), yet its inevitable “video” effect was still tolerable to those who cherish the filmic look of 24p material.

Standard Definition (Freeview Digital TV)

For live action sports however, we certainly wouldn’t hesitate in setting [Motionflow] to “Standard” for an even higher motion resolution, though to be honest we struggled to see any significant advantage over the 100Hz Motionflow on the W4500 series. During England’s football friendly against Germany on ITV1, we did notice the odd sparkles around the high-contrast areas of moving objects (e.g. the names and numbers on the back of the players’ shirts), but thankfully these were pretty much negligible amidst the onslaught of compression artefacts like mosquito noise and macro-blocking stemming from the broadcast source.

Germany vs England

Otherwise, as long as a sensible viewing distance was adopted, Freeview channels with reasonable bit-rate were immensely watchable on the Sony KDL40Z4500 LCD television due to its deep blacks, accurate colours and above average scaling.

HD Console Gaming (Sony PS3)

We’re not sure if the theoretically faster LCD panel played a part here, but the input lag we measured on the Sony KDL40Z4500 was typically 15-20ms lower than that on the W4500, even with [Motionflow] engaged. Of course, the playing field would be levelled if [Game/Text Mode] was activated: the input lag on both TVs would drop to a mouthwatering 0-10ms, which – alongside vibrant colours and exceptional detail – paved the way for an utterly immersive gaming experience.

World At War multiplayer

The downside is that [Game/Text Mode] automatically deactivates the 200Hz Motionflow system on Sony KDL40Z4500, but we’ll choose a lag-free gaming response over a slight reduction in motion blur any day, particularly for reflex-dependent multiplayer first-person shooters such as Call Of Duty 5: World At War.

Conclusion

The deep blacks, accurate colours and low input lag on Sony’s latest high-end (W series and above) LCD HDTVs need no further praise, so we’re left to comment on the Sony KDL40Z4500’s 200Hz Motionflow implementation.

The good news? There are surprisingly few kinks for what effectively is the first incarnation of 200Hz MCFI technology. Now the not-so-good news: any resultant improvement in motion clarity isn’t really leaps and bounds ahead of what 100Hz LCD televisions currently offer when it comes to real-life viewing.

So while the Sony KDL40Z4500 holds the current record for the highest motion resolution we have measured on an LCD TV so far, pound-for-pound we think that the Sony KDL40W4500 (equipped with 100Hz Motionflow) represents better value-for-money.

Highly Recommended

54 comments

  1. Does the W or the Z 4500 produce more “videolook”,when MF LOW engadget and whats the Motion Resolution of the 40W4500 with 100Hz Low?

  2. Oh you can only compare Standart and Low,since The W4500 doesn’t have a Low Setting.
    I assume,the Videolook in Standard is more significant than on Z’s Low MF?

  3. Thank you Vincent, always reviewing the products we all want to know about…

    Regards from Spain.

  4. Thanks for the review. Thanks to your pages I finally decided to buy Sony KDL-46W4500 :-)

  5. First of all, disabling 200Hz MotionFlow in Game Mode is a no-go for me. Ok, lag free gaming is important, but if Sony doesn’t manage to implement its main appeal of high motion resolution with 200Hz MF in every mode, especially if you’re a gamer, than something’s not right. Maybe keeping the image lag free in Game Mode prevents MotionFlow technique from being implemented (?). For every step forwards, there’s a step (or two) backwards. It’s the story of Sony and other major devs. Complete and fully satisfying (HDTV) solutions won’t sell you a TV next year, so economically speaking those manufacturers are right (in their own regards). It’s the same with cars, hifi, music cd production etc. So, yes, I’m dissapointed as a gamer and a consumer.

    Secondly, does the 40W4500 disable MotionFlow 100Hz in Game Mode?

  6. Could you post your calibration results/settings ?

  7. 0,06 calibrated?
    The temperature color has been calibrated?
    The gamma has been calibrated?
    How can you be spoken of calibrazione without calibrating the rgb and the gamma?

  8. To my opinion, this cannot be call calibration.
    For calibration he intends another thing.
    40ire?

  9. Where is the gamma?

  10. Where is the calibration?

  11. Where is the value of gamma?

  12. I would consider upgrading my television with that. I tested it out at a while back and can confirm it’s the real deal.

  13. Thank you for this review! I bought the TV a couple of weeks ago and find it exellent!! Maybe not the best value for money, but really great!

    Could you please post the callibrated settings though? That would be highly appriciated!

  14. Thank you for the review. Looks like this (Z) gets me back to Sony, since the clouding on W has been a real turn-off. I was already looking for alternatives from other brands.

  15. if you are a videophile and your family (wife) can deal with the techno menus (plus you want to upgrade the firmware to fix the Samsung A650 on/off bug), get the Samsung. If you want the a super clear Picture (videophile made easy), easiest to use LCD with features that make every day TV viewing smooth and easy… The sony is excellent- Plus it is future expandible.

  16. Does the Z4500 series have the partially glossy screen that the W4500 series has ?

    I’ve seen the W4500 in action and while its not a full glossy screen it is partially reflective especially with any lights in the room which would drive me nuts.

  17. Greetings,

    I’ve got only one simple question to the reviewer – purely for PS3 gaming w4500 or w4000?? I don’t care about movies, sports, sd/hd tv signals etc. Console/pc games only.

    Input lag, clouding other effects, price etc…

  18. Vincent! This site has been without any new updates with reviews for more than 2,5 months? Is this site dead? Or are you guys too hit with global recession so much that there are not that many AV enthusiasts interested in new flat panels anymore?

  19. How come everywhere I look on forums they are complaining about clouding, while in this review you guys say it’s not an issue. Moreover clouding would be a problem of the new w4500 en z4500 and not the w4000. What is true about al this stuff… ???

  20. I just ordered it….. I the shop I showed a great picture and got a good price (equivalent to EUR 1300 !!!
    Keep you posted.

  21. RB on 13 March 2009 1:46 pm

    I just ordered it….. I the shop I showed a great picture and got a good price (equivalent to EUR 1300 !!!
    Keep you posted.

    hey where do you ordered? i want to buy a tv too from england but many stores aren’t shipping to the netherlands.

  22. I have been trying since Christmas(08) to buy the “Z4500” in Ireland but have had no success. “should have been here last week” is the cry from stores.
    Can anyone advise me as to when and where and price..in Euro.

    Thanks.

  23. Is the new 200 hz LCD made in Japan or other

    Sam

  24. Hello braviaZ
    could someone post the origin White Balance Settings on level 0;1;2;3
    I want to compare the settings
    thank
    Heuser

  25. Is there a service menu? How to enter?

  26. tell me if this TV has bleeding backlight? because i want to buy it soon. I’ve read online that KDL-40Z4500 has bleeding backlight issue so please replay as soon as possible.

  27. try up north, i got mine in samsyerman.ie , the 46z4500 is about 3,000 euro down south
    .. i got mine foe £1420 inc shipping

    “Jim Bailey on 29 March 2009 6:38 pm

    I have been trying since Christmas(08) to buy the “Z4500? in Ireland but have had no success. “should have been here last week” is the cry from stores.
    Can anyone advise me as to when and where and price..in Euro.

    Thanks.”

  28. Vincent,

    Firstly, very informative website, keep up the good work!

    I’m trying to decide between buying the 40w4000 or the 40z4500, based primarily on input lag as I’ll be using it mainly as a computer moniter for high end FPS, etc.

    When you state that the 40z4500 has an input lag of 0-10ms in game mode, is that in comparison with the F96 or in real time? In other words is the 40z4500’s input lag comparable to the 40w4000 (which recorded a 30ms faster response time than the F96), or 30-40ms slower than it with game mode enabled?

    Also I’ve read on other forums that it is possible to connect a PC to either TV with a DVI to HDMI connection, and with the right video card get true 1080p 60Hz images. Can you confirm this?

  29. Hey there. There was a question about the service menu for this TV. Can anyone tell how to enter it please!

  30. when i try to connect my xbox360 by the vga input, i get the message that the signal is not suported why is this?

  31. Got this last week……..simply stunning! picture quality is amazing, built in tuner is superb and blu ray just takes it to another level.
    I know its last years model but for a grand and being able to wipe the floor with any other tv at this level its a must for any one looking for a 40inch tv.
    Dont be put off by what some might say about it looking dated and being chunky, its packed with top rated components and they haven’t cut costs anywhere and its extremely easy to use, i didnt even need to read the manual!

  32. plz , persian operating instructions

  33. I use these settings on my KDL46Z4500…

    Picture…

    Picture Mode: Cinema
    Backlight: 2
    Contrast: 80
    Brightness: 50
    Colour: 60
    Colour Temperature: Warm 2
    Sharpness: 3
    Noise Reduction: Low
    MPEG Noise Reduction: Off

    Advanced Settings…

    Adv. Contrast Enhancer: Off
    Colour Space: Standard

    Features…

    Power Saving: Standard Power
    Light Sensor: Off
    Motionflow: Max
    Film Mode: Off
    Game/Text Mode: Off
    x.v.Colour: Auto

    Used Video Essentials (Blu-ray) to set up.
    Sources include PS3 & Virgin V+ HD. Use the same settings for everything and love it to bits!

    Hope this helps.

  34. Want to push sony to release a Firmwareupdate with FULL DLNA Support!

    Please flood sony with mails on mass.

    For a more peaceful solution: does anybody have such a firmwareupdate?!

  35. I’m sorry if this has been posted elsewhere, but I couldn’t find it anywhere. I live in the United States and the majority of model numbers used across Europe do not match those found here. How would I go about finding the same televisions that are listed on this site, but with the model numbers for over here? I am having a very hard time deciding what to buy because pretty much nothing here matches the models over here and I have to guess by the features if it’s “the same” or not, and that’s not very good.

  36. I love playing games such as guitar hero, and with that, lag, is a VERY important issue. My current TV is a sony, its 26″ but its a couple of years old now, all i need to know, is, what does guitar hero say the lag is when you calibrate it? mine says 0ms, which is perfect, but every other HDTV i have tried is really bad, from 40-100ms.

    Anyone got guitar hero that could try it for me? thanks!

  37. 40Z4500, PS3, Guitar Hero 3, wireless guitar

    In Game Mode, my calibrations say Audio: 0-25 ms, Video: 0 ms

  38. I am going to buy Sony40Z4500. Do anyone have this. If yes, how is it??
    Kindly let me know.
    Uthira

  39. contrast and colour washed out slightly earlier than the W4000 and W4500 when viewed from an angle.

    Ouch, cause I have the w4000 and the viewing angle is not that great. I can spend ages calibrating and then sit slightly to the side of the screen and realise it was all for nothing, sitting directly in front of the TV is the only way to get it’s full contrast/quality.

    A lot of these new panels seem to have a crap viewing angle.

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