A while ago I posted about this plasma display on the "XBOX360 on Plasma or LCD TV, which is better" thread. At the time I was deciding between this plasma display and the Panasonic PT-AE900 projector. Unfortunately the room that's supposed to be converted to AV room has now become the guest room and storeroom. So that rules out the AE900.
Originally the seller only advertises the 4202TW and 4222TW which were EDTV (852 x 480) plasmas. I inquired about the 4203TW which supports HDTV resolution at 1366x768 and he confirms he can get this model also.
I did some research and managed to find info about the Plaxio brand and AIC. This display goes by a few different names. Plaxio, Disteck, Techview are the ones that came up during my research. The panels are either LG or Samsung plasma panels. To cut a long story short, I placed the order for the 4203TW.
I picked up the plasma about 2 weeks ago. Upon unpacking everything I saw the brand that I got is Disteck, meant for US market. I noticed something else also, the sticker at the back says this is model 4202TW, not 4203TW that I ordered. The packing box and manual also says this is the 4202TW. A quick call to Frankie (the seller's LYN nick) and he assured me that except for the stickers, that is the 4203TW.
To test and confirm that the plasma that I received is indeed the HDTV capable 4203TW I plugged in my notebook to the VGA port, enabled dual screen and lo and behold Powerstrip detects the display as having a max native resolution of 1366x768. I also plugged the XBOX 360 to the VGA port and the display output to 1280x720p. The plasma detects this and set itself to 1280x720. I ran a series of 720P test images and confirmed that the display is indeed the 4203TW.
First order of business is to break-in the display. Plugged my DVD player to the component input and ran the break-in SVCD for plasma display for 16 hours. Links at the bottom of this post. Once that is done I calibrated the display using AVIA dvd. For Component input I can only adjust the brightness, contrast and sharpness. There are no adjustments for hue and saturation. Brightness and contrast can be adjusted in 100 steps while sharpness is limited to 5 pre-set settings (Softest - Soft - Normal - Sharp - Sharpest). When using the VGA input, there two extra adjustments, phase and frequency. Strangely, you can adjust hue and saturation (color and tint) on the S-Video input.
As with most plasmas, you can get burn-in issues. With this plasma I do notice slight burn-in from time to time. This is especially noticeable when the plasma displays a dark or black background, such as game intro/loading screens when launching from the dashboard, where you can see the outlines of the dashboard on the screen. Fortunately it's not permanent. Once the game is running it's gone.
For 5k, it's not bad display, I'd say a generation or two behind current plasma display technology. The display is nice and sharp, even at about 2-3 feet distance you don't notice the mask/filter grid. You do get limited adjustability when it comes to tweaking the display, and only 1 component input. No HDMI input, but DVI is there, along with VGA, S-Video and 2 SCART input.
This post has been edited by MK84: Apr 3 2006, 03:21 PM
Technical XBOX 360 on the Plaxio Plasma Display, Short review/test
Apr 3 2006, 03:20 PM, updated 20y ago
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