Product Details
Sony KDL-40W3000 - 40'' Widescreen Bravia 1080P Full HD LCD TV - With Freeview

Sony KDL-40W3000 - 40'' Widescreen Bravia 1080P Full HD LCD TV - With Freeview
From Sony

Price: £1,243.00

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by Reliant Direct

6 new or used available from £699.99

Average customer review:

Product Description

Sony KDL40W3000U 40 inch HD Ready LCD TV 1800:1 1920 x 1080 with Digital TV Tuner.Main Features:40 inch LCD TVHD ReadyContrast ratio: 1800:1Brightness 500 cd/m2Native resolution: 1920x1080Turbo Boost safety feature - built in protection function which defaults CD speed to 40x as a defence against poor media quality (Can be changed to maximum speed at the touch of a button)FREEVIEW3 x HDMI (2xRear, 1xSide)Force Front Surround Sound / Digital DolbyLive Colour CreationBRAVIA Engine EXBRAVIA Theatre Sync2 x SC...


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #27182 in Consumer Electronics
  • Brand: Sony
  • Model: KDL40W3000U
  • Released on: 2007-09-12
  • Dimensions: 48.50 pounds

Features

  • SONY 40" LCD TELEVISION IN BLACK
  • 3 X HDMI INPUTS
  • 1920 X 1080 PIXEL RESOLUTION
  • 1800:1 CONTRAST RATIO
  • IN BLACK

Editorial Reviews

Manufacturer's Description
Sony Nav-U Buying Guide
Sony Logo Bravia Logo

BRAVIA W3000 Series LCD TV


Available in 40, 46 & 52" Screen Sizes

For consumers wanting a technology packed HD1080 LCD and that have access to HD1080 content such as Sky Sports (BRAVIA Engine EX).
The BRAVIA W-Series LCD TVs are HD1080 and come fully loaded with technology. featuring ultra high dynamic contrast up to 16000:1 ensuring you don’t miss any of the details. BRAVIA Engine EX works to maximise the potential from any signal, including HD. Whilst S-Force Surround Sound gives you the closest experience to surround sound without a 5.1 speaker setup giving the best sound you can get from a TV without using a Home Cinema system

BRAVIA W3000 Series LCD TV


HD1080p

HD1080p

HD 1080p offers you very high resolution to generate it's picture. The 'p' stands for 'progressive scan', which scans all the lines at once to add stability & smoothness to fast-moving images. This makes 1080p TV's excellent for sport broadcast & games.


Integrated Digital Tuner / Freeview

Integrated Digital Tuner / Freeview

Having an integrated Digital Freeview Tuner means that your TV has a built in receiver that will give you access to many more channels without the need to have any additional hardware, such as a Freeview box. In 2007, the government will begin switching UK broadcasting to digital, so if your TV doesn’t have an integrated digital tuner feature you wont be able to view any channel without buying the additional hardware.


HDMI Sockets

HDMI Sockets

The W3000 series comes with 3 X HDMI Sockets – 2 to the rear of the set and 1 at the side.
Your HDMI socket provides a connection point on your TV that is able to deliver a high definition picture. Quite simply, the more HDMI sockets that you have on your BRAVIA LCD TV, the more components you are able to link up to for HD picture quality, for instance, a Blu-ray player, your camcorder and your gaming console. Having the socket located in the front of the TV means that you no longer have to get into awkward positions or move the unit in order to gain access to the connection point, great if you’re viewing your photos on your TV via your digital camera.


S Force Front Surround / Dolby Digital

S Force Front Surround / Dolby Digital

Unique surround sound technology that gives you 5.1 channel virtual surround sound from just 2 speakers. Using precise variations in timing and volume projection S-Force fools the brain into thinking the sound is coming from different directions.
This gives your BRAVIA LCD TV enhanced sound quality and the impression of 5.1 channel virtual surround sound without the need for extra speakers.


Live Colour Creation

Live Colour Creation

Live Colour Creation is a backlight system which produces a wider colour gamut, seen particularly with the red and green areas of the spectrum. So your TV picture will have more lifelike and natural colours with no smudging or dulling of the image.


BRAVIA Engine EX

BRAVIA Engine EX

This picture enhancement technology ensures that the image produced on screen represents perfection.

  • It reduces colour distortion by decreasing ‘cross colour’, ‘dot crawl’ and ‘moire’ the sort of distortion that you get on patterns such as a checked shirt. It cleans up the haze that you often see around lettering such as titles or text so that they appear perfectly sharp on screen.

  • It enhances specific areas of low contrast within the image giving an overall crisp picture.

  • It smoothes the motion, preventing jagged edges and bleeding colours on fast moving objects, ideal for sports & action sequences.

  • It matches colours, which ensures the final image is reproduced exactly as the original source intended meaning that you see incredibly natural colours.


Dynamic Contrast

Dynamic Contrast

Contrast ratio is improved and all shades between the brightest white and the darkest blacks are maintained, so the picture has more depth and detail. This is achieved as the backlight brightness adjusts according to the brightness of the scene. Sony’s unique dynamic contrast system features ACE (advanced contrast enhancer) which ensures all of the subtle shades of grey are maintained.


24P True Cinema

24P True Cinema

'24p True Cinema' mode, is a perfect match for movies. Film is shot at 24 frames per second, but UK televisions operate at 25 frames per second. This means that when you watch a movie on DVD, you are seeing it sped up by 4 per cent. '24p True Cinema' enables the panel to display films at their intended 24fps (frames per second).


X.V. Colour

X.V. Colour

X.V colour offers a colour palette of 100% of the colour spectrum giving more depth, detail and natural images and is closer to the colour spectrum seen by the human eye.



BRAVIA Theatre Sync

BRAVIA Theatre Sync

A one touch control over your whole Home theatre set up. Simply press the Theatre button on the TV’s remote control, the TV’s sound turns off & the picture settings configure automatically to an optimal movie watching mode. BRAVIA Theatre Sync cuts out the complexity so that you can concentrate on enjoying your movie.


VESA Hole Spacing

VESA Hole Spacing

VESA-Standard or Video Electronics Standards Association is a perfect template for hole spacing (screw holes) in flat screens. So providing your wall bracket is also VESA standard, hanging your TV on the wall, for example, is a simple process without the frustration of drilling the holes incorrectly and in the wrong place.


‘Sony’, ‘Live Colour Creation’, ‘x.v.Colour’, ‘HD 1080’, ‘BRAVIA Engine EX’, ‘BRAVIA Theatre Sync’, ‘S-Force PRO Front Surround’, ‘BRAVIA’ and their logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sony Corporation, Japan. All other trademarks are acknowledged.

Box Contents

  • Remote control
  • Batteries
  • AC power cord
  • Coaxial cable
  • Instructions
  • HD cable
  • Support belt and screws
  • Quick set up guide
  • Warranty card
  • On-line registration card

Customer Reviews

Fantastic Picture, let down by extremely poor EPG3
I'm sure you've noticed that the majority of reviews for the Sony Bravia KDL-40W3000 LCD TV are favourable, and it is true to say that the picture on the Bravia was the key selling point when I bought the TV, and this was after spending many hours in Sony/Panasonic shops to find the best 40".

I'm only giving the TV 3 stars because this is the lowest rating anyone should give for the TV as the picture is amazing. It's not the picture I have a problem with though, but the EPG (electronic programme guide).

I'll have to say that although text is displayed in hi-res, the EPG is awful. I've had freeview for years now, and even the most basic box I've owned can let a user browse through the information of other channels whilst watching the current TV broadcast on-screen. You can then switch to the channel you want via this on-screen info if you find a channel you like the sound of.
You can't do this type of on-screen browsing with the Sony Bravia KDL-40W3000 at all.

Another problem is that you can bring up the Sony's EPG in full, but programmes display their title only and not their information so you can't view their content. The only way you can bring up a programme's information is by pressing the i+ button on the remote and this will fully close down the EPG and display the channel you're interested in with your current broadcast in the background every time.

This is a useless and time-consuming procedure if you use a programme's infomation/content to choose your channels.
Sure, you can go buy a copy of the Radio Times for this info, but this defeats the object of having an EPG in the first place.

I have no idea why Sony have implemented such a useless EPG in their Bravia W3000 series.
I own a Sony Freeview box (VTX-D800U) and have that connected to my Bravia now so that I can use a better EPG. Unfortunately this means that the picture I get isn't as good (as the freeview tuner that comes inside the Bravia is far superior), but I simply can't do without a decent EPG.

Another feature lacking in the KDL-40W3000 is the fact that the UK model doesn't have Picture in Picture (PiP), and instead has a feature called Picture AND Picture (PAP), where you have two unsizable (apparently the American model of the Sony will let you size both pictures equally) screens next to each other.
In practice this is pretty useless, as you can only have a large AV picture in the left-hand part of the screen, and in comparison a really tiny picture in the right-hand part, (which is usually the freeview broadcast) and you can't swap them over. In fact I don't think you can even have the Sony freeview picture in the larger portion of the Picture and Picture mode at all. A great feature of Picture in Picture on a lot of other televisions is that you can switch the source screens around with each other, but you can't do this with the Sony's freeview picture and any other AV source (like a console game, DVD or SKY+). How frustrating!

My advice is to go to a Sony store and get given a demonstration of their EPG and PAP mode before you buy. If you're like me, then you're going to be pretty disappointed with it.

Sublime5
I awoke one morning after the recent birth of our son and thought, "we need a treat and it's time for a big TV". Like many others I suspect, I hadn't a clue where to start other than knowing that I wanted a 40" flat screen, probably LCD rather than plasma and that was it. A friend of ours bought a 46" 40W2000 last year and I knew he would have done exhaustive research so I asked him for his opinion - which was one of absolute contentment (although he did hint that if he had his time again he might go for one of the new Samsungs - still haven't found out why but when I questioned him more and said I really couldn't be bothered with doing research myself so should I go for the Sony or not - he said YES).

The question was then which one to buy - the 40w3000, 40w2000 which is last year's model and can still be found for £899 at Comet, or upgrade totally to the 40x3500. I decided on the 40w3000 for the following simple reasons:

- For us spending £1k on a tv is enough - I really couldn't justify another £1k for the X series even if I could have understood what the main differences were
- the 40w2000 is meant to be an outstanding TV (and I've seen the 46" in action - it's top notch), but for an extra £100 I was getting a newer version so it was a no brainer
- I read so many online reviews from tech sites, to lads mags and national press reviews and all concurred that I couldn't go far wrong with 40w3000 (or any of the others)
- I've always liked the idea of having a Sony Bravia - sold on the advertising I guess, but after years with Philips I also fancied a change of brand
- and last but not least, it was an easy choice because of the great price on Amazon

So, I read the reviews on here and decided to purchase. Two days ago it was delivered (more on that later) and since then it's been TV FRENZY!!! It's an absolute stunner. If you know loads about TVs then you might find fault with blackscreen or backlights or somethingo or other, but I'm just comparing it to what we had before and it's brilliant. We've got a regular DVD player and VHS and they both work fine - the quality of DVDs is superb - our first movie was Bladerunner and it was awesome; and watching Disney films with the family is a whole new experience - especially when the picture quality is turned to Vivid.

The sound is really good and better that I expected given I haven't got a surround sound system (but I think it will be coming my way soon). Menus are easy to navigate and the auto set-up meant I was watching TV within 30 mins of opening the box. I know others have found it difficult and I may well need assitance once I have more gadgets and wires to plug in, but I didn't find setting it up a problem - very easy indeed if you're used to fitting plugs into a basic pc and tv and the remote is very easy to navigate as well.

So far, no problems whatsoever - an absolute dream of a purchase and would heartily recommend it to anyone.

As for Amazon - great service, stunning price and I trust them. I would say though that it was disappointing to order their 'great price' stand only to find out they couldn't find one - end result is I've bought a stand from another retailer - John Lewis - and it's not being delivered until 5 days after the TV. A pain but not life threatening.

The courier service was also fairly random - the courier didn't call to arrange a delivery time - luckily I called them to check they had the right numbers otherwise I would never have known it was coming a day earlier than estimated. They then couldn't deliver so had to come back the next day and still not tell me a time. As I said to Amazon, if I've just spent £1k on a TV I'd be willing to spend a bit more to get a guaranteed delivery, with a courier firm which called me, and more quickly (please).

When all is said and done - there might be better TVs out there and if I'd spent a few days researching this and that I might have gone for something else - but right now, I'm really pleased I didn't. Right, got to go, I'm off to watch Band of Brothers box set. Yippee.


So far so good4
After many years of holding out for the Next Big Thing in TV hardware, I finally caved and spent a small fortune on this "reassuringly expensive" TV and a companion HD recorder. I'm sure they'll get cheaper, but I (hope) don't think they'll get much better.

The worst thing you could say about it is "it's big ... REALLY big", but oddly on a clear glass stand it doesn't dominate the room any more than our bulky old 28 inch CRT.

Setup was a doddle. Channel auto-search was quick and the digital EPG loaded up almost instantly. It's true the picture needs to be tweaked to taste, but for immediate purposes switching from "vivid" to "standard" and notching the backlight down a couple of points took the searchlight brilliance out of Channel 4's on-air showing of "The Fifth Element".

It's a joy to watch. I have no HDMI sources but everything from off-air to DVD and Divx playback looks great. Saturday's C4 movie looked as detailed as any disc-based playback. Upscaled DVD images from a HDMI connected player are spectacular - amazing depth and detail in season 2 Doctor Who story "The Impossible Planet". The images from a SCART connected player set to RGB are softer but a lot of people probably wouldn't notice, and until I buy an external surround decoder I'm happy to live with it.

The only real demerits are learning to navigate the remote and the slightly clunky mechanism for switching between inputs. Get the connections right and these seem to be automatic for switching on but don't always revert after switching off. A minor nuisance.

Audiophiles will quibble, I'm sure, but the built in sound is strong and clear.

Buy one while they're still out there!