Kuro is the New Black : Review: Pioneer 60-inch Elite Kuro Pro 151FD Plasma
January 23, 2009 By Grant ClauserAnother unique video feature of the Kuro, called Advanced PureCinema, takes the 24Hz signal from Blu-ray players and converts it to 72Hz. This has the effect of taking some of the judder out of moving pictures. Judder isn’t nearly as much a problem with plasma TVs as it is with LCDs, but with a picture this size (60 inches) small flaws are magnified so the dejudder feature is welcome.
The Kuro panel is based on a deep-encased plasma cell structure which prevents light leakage as well as some heavy-duty image processing. As to the picture itself, remember that Kuro means black in Japanese. Pioneer is putting all its money on the black since black level affects overall picture quality more than anything else. When you have a good deep black, the rest of the picture tends to fall into place. With this set Pioneer has achieved near perfection. I spent time watching several Blu-ray movies such as The Black Knight and Speed Racer (an underappreciated and gorgeous movie) plus bright HDTV broadcasts, notably local news over an antenna. The intense black levels this TV achieves gives the picture more depth than nearly any I’ve seen on a flat panel. At the same time, colors looked rich and realistic. High def newscasts were bright and detailed, and at 60-inches, somewhat unflattering to the newscasters. In a word, outstanding.
Of course, this outstanding picture comes at a high price. At $6,500 (actual street price is a bit less) this is almost the most expensive 60-inch plasma you can find. Runco offers a 60-inch model for about $11K and a 65-inch for about $12K. Since I haven’t used those Runcos, or Mitsubishi’s new laser TV (which also claims unheard-of black levels and an equally high price) I can’t say how they compare side-to-side, but this Kuro definitely has the best plasma picture I’ve used. OLED also has the potential to look this good or better, but that technology is years away from reaching home theater size. Some LED-based LCD technologies also have the potential to be exceptional, but at this point, they’re not available. Is this plasma worth the premium price? That depends on your priorities and your wallet.
Pioneer Elite Kuro PRO-151FD
$6,500
60-inch plasma
1080p resolution
4 HDMI inputs
Component, S-video, composite inputs
USB
Ethernet
Home Media Gallery
ATSC/NTSC/QAM tuner
Optical audio out
External ambient light sensor
backlit remote
removable 18 Watt speakers
ISF mode
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