Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 LCD TV with freesat HD review

by Tarinder Sandhu on 4 December 2009, 17:06 4.0

Tags: Sony BRAVIA 40W5810, SONY UK (T.V)

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Final thoughts and verdict

Sony's BRAVIA 40W5810 is the company's latest mid-range full-HD LCD television, released in October 2009, which currently etails for around £800.

Steadfastedly holding on to using established CCFL technology rather than LED backlighting for its bevy of mid-range screens, the latest incarnation of the W-series range adds in integrated freesat HD support and a minor facelift when compared to last year's models.

Fed with the highest-quality source and settings tweaked to your liking, the 40W5810 can produce an excellent picture that's almost eye-poppingly crisp. Indeed, if one hasn't seen the very best LED-backlight and OLED screens in action, the W-series Sonys would instantly beguile most.

Standard-definition processing sees a bump in quality from last year's efforts, it seems, and the integrated freesat HD receiver is useful if you need it, albeit rather lacking in high-definition content, which is a shame.

All brilliant, then? Not quite. The audio's not particularly good and the styling's rather bland. Furthermore, the freesat-less W5500 can be purchased for £100 less, and LED-backlit models don't cost that much more. Then there's the thorny size vs. quality debate, and the 40W5810's outlay brings a number of big-name 46in 1080p TVs into the mix.

Ultimately, the Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 is a very good LCD that can produce excellent imagery. The integrated freesat HD is only worth it for those that really, really need it. So if you only have room for a 40in screen and don't want to spend the earth, the 40W5810 is a safe bet and worthy of being on a shortlist, especially as it's currently offered with a three-year warranty as standard.

The good

Excellent PQ from high-definition sources
Deep, luscious blacks; good contrast ratio
Easy to setup
freesat HD (may be a negative for some, given the price)
Free three-year warranty (as of December 3rd, 2009)

The not so good

CCFL lighting not quite as pin-sharp as LED's.
Audio is average at best
£800 etail price makes it rather expensive for a 40in set.

HEXUS Rating

We consider any product score above '50%' as a safe buy. The higher the score, the higher the recommendation from HEXUS to buy. Simple, straightforward buying advice.

The rating is given in relation to the category the product competes in, therefore the Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 TV is evaluated with respect to our 'high-end' criteria.

80%

Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 LCD TV

HEXUS Awards


Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 LCD TV

HEXUS Where2Buy

The Sony BRAVIA 40W5810 LCD TV is available for £798 from Multizoneav.com and includes a three-year warranty. The 46W5810 is available for £1,092, also with a three-year warranty.

HEXUS Right2Reply

At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



HEXUS Forums :: 15 Comments

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Having viewed this TV in the flesh I was massively disappointed. £899 for a TV with this spec? I think not, I'd rather buy the Samsung 650/750 myself, As I think the panel quality is far better, and I can't honestly see any improvement on SD pictures with the Bravia Engine 3…..

I still think Sony's are over priced myself across the whole range and unfortunately cannot rely on their old reputation as the build quality and picture quality is not as good as you'd expect for the price.

just my 2p.

Ben
Bunjiweb
Having viewed this TV in the flesh I was massively disappointed. £899 for a TV with this spec? I think not, I'd rather buy the Samsung 650/750 myself, As I think the panel quality is far better, and I can't honestly see any improvement on SD pictures with the Bravia Engine 3…..

I still think Sony's are over priced myself across the whole range and unfortunately cannot rely on their old reputation as the build quality and picture quality is not as good as you'd expect for the price.

just my 2p.

Ben

So when are Samsung gonna bring a Freesat telly to the table?

You wouldn't look at a set like this unless you REALLY wanted the Freesat tuner
Can't you pick up one of those Samsung LED series TV's for £800 ?
this and the 40w5500 are exactly the same supposedly except for the freesat.

and theres quite a big price gap between the two… you decide if you want integrated fresat!

also the networking is a load of tosh, i bought an 37w5500 (love it it bits) but when connected to my Netgear NAS, not one video was able to be streamed (supports like one type of format!)
I think the wave Freesat HD was riding has all but vanished now as Freeview HD is coming out - i know people cant get a signal with freeview etc etc but still…