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| Screen size | 32 inches (81 cm) | ||
| Resolution | 1366 x 768 Pixels | ||
| HD compatibility (1080i/720p) | 720p | ||
| HD Ready certification | Oui | ||
| Brightness | 500 cd/m2 | ||
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| Contrast ratio | 5000:1 |
| Viewing angles (H+V) | 176° / 176° |
| Response time | NC |
| Sound level | NC |
| Connectivity | 2 HDMI, 2 Péritel, 1 YUV, ... |
| Dimensions (LxHxW) | 911,4 x 596 x 259 mm |
| Weight | 27.1Kg |
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From the start, the 32LB2R has an enormous advantage with its good color fidelity. This isn’t the case for the majority of competing products which display saturated colors, flattering but not true. So movies are better rendered here than on its rivals. After this, the 32LB2R benefits from XD Engine III image correction circuitry, which offers one of the highest performances. It assures good sharpness, very little flickering, and overall very satisfactory gradation. However, to really take advantage of this television, use an HD player – Blu-Ray type, Sony PS3 or HD-DVD type with the Microsoft Xbox 360 – as the source. Then choose a signal in 1080 lines. The resulting clean image and gain in sharpness is obvious and more than appreciable.
For more details read the main article.
Test date: 2007-04-13
As for the 100 Hz mode, it evidently functions on the same principle as Samsung’s, however not as efficiently. A processor tries to place an intermediate image between two received ones in order to improve fluidity, reduce afterglow, etc. Except here, this isn’t too successful. In movies, it’s intolerable and in games unconvincing, which obviously means the processor struggles with this technology. When this function is activated we have the impression of being in a 1920’s film although with the acceleration of movement. This of course isn’t really true and the speed is still the same. We thought that this could come from the processor sometimes succeeding in placing the intermediate image and sometimes not. And it’s probably in going from one speed to the other too often in a frequency of 50 to 100 Hz, which changes the rhythm and bothers us. In short, deactivate the 100 Hz function!

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The 32LB2R’s advantage also lies in its correction of MPEG compression. Flickering is controlled better than average. However, while the 37LB1R seemed at ease with all formats, the 32LB2R is a bit moodier and has its preferences. Quality truly improves as we go up in resolution.
- DVD : good and better than average but we do see some scaling defects.
- 720p source: very good, nice sharpness, very little shimmering.
- 1080 line source: even better. It’s rare because "simple HD" or non full HD TVs usually render better in 720p than in 1080i and 1080p. Here this isn’t the case. Movies in 1080i via our Xbox 360 have even better sharpness than in 720p.

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Overall, very little twinkling
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Pre-calibrated, true colors
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Good reactivity
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Perfect in PC mode: resolution recognized, good sharpness and colors
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Compression defects visible on DVDs
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Lacks wide gamut backlighting for better extreme shades
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No TNT tuner
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100 Hz mode not too convincing, even not recommended most of the time
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Black lacks depth at 0.45 cd/m˛








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