Version: 2008
  • On The Insider: Britney's Bikini-Clad Top 10

CNET Archive BETA

Find more recent Flat-panel TV products


advertisement
mySimon mySimon mySimon Outdoor Gear mySimon Swimwear mySimon Home and Garden

BenQ 46W1T (discontinued)

BenQ 46W1T

Entered CNET Catalog: 01/25/2003

SKU: 0840046003692

Manufacturer: BenQ

Manufacturer description

In today's crowded environment, it's vital for you to catch the eye of every single customer. During an important business conference, your efforts need to be presented in perfect form. The BenQ 46W1 plasma was created to fulfill your dreams in picture, sound, and spirit. The BenQ 46W1 plasma display features high illumination, the finest digital resolution, and a body that's wafer-thin and super lightweight. It is a cinch to fit into any space or hang anywhere. Experience perfect digital sensory immersion in the home, and in your most important business presentations, advertising, shop-front displays, briefings, educational training and other commercial applications.

Product summary

The goodThe good: Solid feature package with individual memory for each input; great color decoding; decent video processing with 3:2 pull-down; relatively inexpensive.

The badThe bad: Inadequate picture control; poor black-level performance; significant noise and false-contouring artifacts; low resolution; no HDCP copy protection.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: This low-resolution plasma is a mediocre performer, but it's very aggressively priced.

Average user rating: 0 stars Not yet available

CNET editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 10/09/2003
Everyone--and we mean everyone--is getting into the plasma market. BenQ's PDP-46W1 plasma TV is for all practical purposes identical to V's Vizio V4, and they're both near twins of their Gateway competitor. Offering 46-inch, low-resolution screens and relatively bargain prices, all three are good values if your main concern is a big picture on a flat panel. People seeking a quality display for home theater should look elsewhere. Framed in plain black, this 3.75-inch-thick panel looks more serious and industrial than the tacky gold-finished Gateway and the brash silver Vizio. The 46W1's standout design attribute is a pair of handles on the back. Two people shouldn't have any trouble hefting the 78-pound set atop a table. BenQ includes a stand, but a wall-mount costs $199 extra.

The remote, identical to that of the Vizio P4, is smallish, has tiny buttons, and lacks illumination. Scrolling to your desired input is a chore, and the menu system is a frustrating jumble of icons and often grayed-out picture controls. With its 852x480-pixel native resolution, the 46W1 can handle every DVD detail but, like almost all plasmas, can't fully resolve HDTV. Of course, the panel can still accept HDTV, TV, and computer signals. Because the set has a 42-inch model's pixel count but is considerably bigger, the pixels are larger and more visible.

The main functionality difference between the 46W1 and its look-alikes is that its DVI input is incompatible with HDCP copy protection. That means this plasma won't work with DVI-equipped HDTV receivers and DVD players such as the Samsung DVD-HD931.
Otherwise, for a plasma, the 46W1 has an impressive feature set. The panel can receive standard (non-HD) TV signals via a built-in NTSC tuner. It also boasts PIP (picture in picture) and a pair of built-in speakers. The color-temperature presets are Warm, Standard, and Cool; the User setting allows a technician to tweak the grayscale. Each input has independent memory, so you can individually optimize the pictures of all your video sources.

The connectivity suite is fairly generous. One set of component-video inputs and one DVI jack head up the list. Finishing off the ins are two for A/V (one with S-Video), one for 15-pin D-Sub VGA computer hookup, and one for RF antenna connection. Finally, you get an RS232 control port. In the lab, we experienced plenty of problems but came across a few impressive finds. For starters, the 46W1's color decoder was really accurate, making for richly saturated, natural-looking hues at the proper settings. The fairly good grayscale tracking contributed to the true colors. The panel's 3:2 pull-down processor reduced artifacts in film-based video sources, such as DVD movies.

On the flip side, the 46W1 offers no control over the DVI input's contrast, brightness, and other such parameters. You need the ability to tweak these basics to get a good picture; otherwise, the DVI jack is next to useless for home theater. This flaw forced us to use the component input for both DVD and HDTV, but the switch revealed more troubles. Serious edge enhancement introduced video noise and caused lines to appear around objects. Since the component in doesn't allow sharpness adjustment, we couldn't fix the problem. When we chose lowly S-Video and set the sharpness selection to 0, we got a much cleaner result.

The BenQ's black-level performance is among the worst we've seen from any plasma. Black looked more like dark gray. Significant false-contouring artifacts appeared as pools of unnatural color and video noise in the shadows. The effect was prevalent in both dark and fairly bright material.

We also ran into a strange issue with HDTV. After we had used the D-Theater version of Joe Kane's Digital Video Essentials to tweak the 46W1 for 720p HDTV, the panel simply would not display the 720p source. This was apparently an isolated incident; the set did handle HDTV on other occasions.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1

User Rating: 8/10

Perfect for the price

Pros: Its very easy to use. The way it connects is so simple that it literaly took me 2 min to get everything going. I bought this thing at MDG Comouters Chicago. Sceptic about the price but realy happy woth it now. This TV for $3399 you cant go wrong.

Cons: I wish it had more connections in the back. The remote was very simple.

Review:

About CNET Archive BETA

Welcome to the CNET Archive, a library of product reviews, user opinions, videos, specifications, and manufacturer descriptions for products no longer offered by the manufacturer or most retailers. Here you will find information on replacement parts and replacement ink cartridges. Read what others had to say about that used laptop you are considering buying. Take a trip down memory lane as you browse and reminisce about your favorite old video game or that first digital camera.

BenQ 46W1T specifications

  • General
  • Product type Plasma panel
  • Diagonal Size 46.0 in - Widescreen
  • Display
  • Technology Plasma (PDP)
  • Resolution 852 x 480
  • Display Format 480p
  • Image Aspect Ratio 16:9
  • Image Contrast Ratio 850:1
  • Widescreen Modes Zoom 16:9 , Zoom , Full , Conventional 4:3 , 16:9 Lbx subttitle
  • Color Temperature Control Yes (Warm/Medium/Cool)
  • Progressive Scan Progressive scanning (line doubling)
  • Viewing Angle 160 degrees
  • Pixel Pitch 1.188 mm
  • Display Menu Language German , Spanish , Portuguese , English , Japanese , Chinese (simplified) , French , Italian
  • Comb Filter 3D digital
  • TV Tuner
  • Tuner Qty No tuner
  • Video Features
  • Video Interface S-Video , Composite , Component
  • HDTV Ready Yes
  • Freeze Memo Yes
  • Audio System
  • Speaker(s) 2.0 x Right/left channel speaker - Built-in - 2.5 Watt
  • Sound Output Mode Stereo
  • Surround Mode Yes
  • Sound Effects TruBass , SRS 3D Sound
  • Output Power / Total 5.0 Watt
  • External Speakers Amplifier Power (Total) 26.0 Watt
  • Connections
  • Connector Type 2.0 x Composite video output ( BNC ) - Rear , 1.0 x Component video input ( 9 pin D-Sub ) - Rear , 1.0 x Audio line-in ( RCA phono x 3 ) - Rear , 1.0 x HD component video / RGB input ( RCA phono x 2 ) - Rear , 1.0 x Composite video input ( 24 pin digital DVI ) - Rear , 1.0 x Serial ( 15 pin D-Sub (DB-15) ) - Rear , 2.0 x VGA input ( Click-fit x 2 ) - Rear , 1.0 x DVI-Digital ( 4 pin mini-DIN ) - Rear , 1.0 x S-Video input ( 15 pin D-Sub (DB-15) ) - Rear , 1.0 x Speakers output ( Mini-phone stereo 3.5 mm ) - Rear , 1.0 x VGA output ( BNC x 5 ) - Rear , 1.0 x Audio line-in ( RCA phono ) - Rear
  • PC Interface DVI , VGA (HD-15)
  • Remote Control
  • Remote Control Remote control - Infrared
  • Power
  • Power Device Power supply - Internal
  • Power AC 120/230 V
  • Power Consumption Operational 330.0 Watt
  • Manufacturer Warranty
  • Service & Support 1 year warranty
  • Service & Support Details Limited warranty - Parts and labor - 1 year
advertisement