
Panasonic’s VT30 plasma line marks an evolution in performance and style over last year’s VT25 Series. It’s true that the TC-P55VT30 is pricey when compared with other plasmas in its size range, and its THX mode could stand to be more accurate. But on the whole, I found watching both 2D and 3D movies on Panasonic’s plasma to be a highly satisfying experience, which is what matters most.
Color temperature (THX mode/Warm2 color temperature preset before; Custom mode/Warm2 color temperature preset after):
20-IRE: 6,538K/6,556 K
30-IRE: 6,590 K/6,606 K
40-IRE: 6,496 K/6,628 K
50-IRE: 6,331 K/6,602 K
60-IRE: 6,224 K/6,522 K
70-IRE: 6,243 K/6,466 K
80-IRE: 6,137 K/6,494 K
90-IRE: 6,169 K/6,539 K
100-IRE: 6,003K/6,473 K
Primary Color Point Accuracy vs. SMPTE HD Standard
|
Color |
Target X |
Measured X |
Target Y |
Measured Y |
|
Red |
0.64 |
0.64 |
0.33 |
0.33 |
|
Green |
0.30 |
0.31 |
0.60 |
0.60 |
|
Blue |
0.15 |
0.15 |
0.06 |
0.07 |
Note: Spectracal’s CalMan Professional Monitor Calibration Software (spectracal.com) was used during the calibration and measurement process. See the PDF below for a complete report with detailed pre- and post-calibration results.
The Panasonic TC-P55VT30’s THX mode/Warm2 color temperature preset delivered the most accurate grayscale performance. Average color temperature was 6,274 kelvins with a maximum deviation of ±363 K from 20 to 90 IRE. After calibration using the 10-point grayscale adjustment in Custom mode, the set’s average color temperature was 6,541 with a maximum deviation of ±128 K from 20 to 90 IRE.
Color-decoder error measured in THX mode was –15% for red, +10% for green, and –5% for blue, while primary color points closely matched the HD standard. Gamma averaged close to 2.0 — a brighter overall profile than the 2.2 target for dim room viewing. After I made adjustments in Custom mode, the set’s color point accuracy and gamma both measured somewhat worse than in THX. I attribute this partly to the TV’s complicated menu structure, which made it extremely challenging to fine-tune certain aspects of its performance without compromising others. Ultimately, after losing a good percentage of my hair, I decided to simply leave things in THX mode and boost contrast from the relatively low 24.5 ftL maximum output for that mode’s default settings to a more typical 35 ftL.
Brightness measured from a 0-IRE (black) field pattern at the THX default settings was 0.006 ftL, which yielded a 4,095:1 contrast ratio. The set displayed full picture resolution for all signal formats delivered via HDMI, although 480i pictures viewed via component video looked somewhat soft. Motion-resolution tests revealed 1,080 lines with the Motion Smoother setting in Custom mode set to Strong. But this also added a “video effect” to film-based content, so I’d suggest leaving it off. (Motion resolution with plasma TVs is already very good without applying additional processing.)
The Panasonic’s deinterlacing of both film- and video-sourced material was mostly good. However, it was unable to deal with 2:2 pulldown on test discs, and was also slow to lock on to a 3:2 cadence. (With 3:2 Pulldown mode set to Auto as opposed to On in the setup menu, it wouldn’t lock on at all.) Noise-reduction processing was very effective, with no picture detail loss visible even with the Video and Mosquito noise filter modes at their highest settings.










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Although I know that having your television professionally calibrated is a personal choice, I do wonder if the difference AFTER calibration was large enough to justify the cost of having it done. Was the overall picture quality improved to a great degree or at least a (positively) noticeable degree? Again, I know that is a subjective call but generally speaking, does the Panasonic VT30 respond well to calibration? Thanks.
I bought last years vt25 50 inch plasma 2010 because it had very good write ups. But now I'm hearing plasmas and gaming systems are not a good idea, i've had the tv for almost a year and me and the kids use the ps3 on it maybe 15 hrs. a week. I havent noticed anything wrong like burn in, but i'm still worried. The guy at best buy said gaming systems decrease the life of the tv unit by double ! Can someone tell me if this is true I really don"t want to damage the tv its been a really good tv to watch.