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Sony Bravia XBR KDL-55XBR8 55-Inch 1080p 120Hz Triluminos LED LCD HDTV | 
| Brand: Sony Category: CE
Buy New: See price in cart
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 14518
Color: Black Media: Electronics Batteries Included: Yes Display Size: 55 Shipping Weight (lbs): 107 Dimensions (in): 58.6 x 5.9 x 31.6 Warranty: 18 months warranty
MPN: KDL55XBR8 Model: KDL55XBR8 UPC: 027242739055 EAN: 0027242739055 ASIN: B001GIPMO4
Release Date: October 14, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Features:
| • | 16:9 Full HD 1080p Resolution Panel (1920x1080) | | • | TRILUMINOS RGB Dynamic LED Backlight Display | | • | BRAVIA Engine 2 PRO fully digital video processor | | • | Motionflow 120Hz PRO technology | | • | DMex capable |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description 54.6" screen (measured diagonally) * widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio * high-gloss black finish with floating glass accents * built-in digital (ATSC) and analog (NTSC) tuners for over-the-air TV broadcasts (antenna required) * built-in QAM cable TV tuner receives unscrambled programs without a set-top box (cable service required) * 1920 x 1080 pixels * TRILUMINOS 3-color LED backlight system for extended color range * Motionflow 120Hz PRO anti-blur technology for clearer motion *
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| Customer Reviews:
Breathtaking. November 21, 2008 R. D. Smith 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
I actually own one. It is hard to imagine how a picture on a TV based on the current ATSC encoding could look any better. The blacks are "black-black". The colors are intense. The picture is bright. The only limitation I can see has more to do with the source material than with the TV itself. I have DirectTV HD and Sony blu-ray, I also have rabbit ears for local TV. I will for the purposes of this review, ignore Analog TV and VCR, both of which are beyond obsolete. With standard 480 source, the mosquito filtering is poor or non-existant. I am not sure if this is because of the TV, because of the upscaling of the DirectTV HD-DVR or because of the original network processing. However with true HD source (either 720P or 1080i), the results are stunning. The 3-D processing (two dimensions of the picture and one dimension of time) to interpolate intermediate frames is just stunning. With any other TV, I have learned how to see the macro blocking when the compression is running at the limit, but this TV does an incredible job of not only smoothing out the inter-frame judder, but it remarkably sharpens the picture for those interpolated frames as well. When I pause a picture with the DVR, you can see macro blocks, but as soon as you press "play", you can actually see the motion processor cutting in. The results with a good blu-ray disk are, well, get your popcorn and 64 oz cup of soda because it is better than a movie theater since it is brighter. I have two complaints, both of them "nits". The first is that it takes way too much effort to set the sleep timer. Obviously Sony did not anticipate that a lot of users would use this TV to fall asleep on the couch with. Its not a big deal, but other TVs have a one button sleep button - the height of lazy, I'll admit. The other thing is that the "universal" remote doesn't know how to control the DirectTV HD-DVR. Like all other universal remotes, you still need a remote caddy in your La-Z-Boy to keep all of your other ones... Of course the obvious down side is the $7,000 price, but YGWYPF.
Viewed the new XBR8 today October 24, 2008 S. Clark (Austin, Tx USA) 6 out of 28 found this review helpful
Saw it at the local Sony style store here in Austin this afternoon. They were showing the Transformer blue-ray and it was AMAZING looking. WOW-the best to be sure. Wish I had an extra 7 grand laying around. And I just got an XBR4 last year.
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