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Samsung PNC590 series (photos)

Samsung's mainstream PNC590 series has solid performance, but it won't wow sticklers looking for plasma TV Nirvana.

David Katzmaier
David reviews TVs and leads the Personal Tech team at CNET, covering mobile, software, computing, streaming and home entertainment. We provide helpful, expert reviews, advice and videos on what gadget or service to buy and how to get the most out of it.
David Katzmaier
1 of 15 Sarah Tew/CNET

Samsung PNC590 series overview

In 2009, Samsung made significant improvements to the picture quality of its higher-end plasma TVs, bringing videophile cred to bear against category king Panasonic. This year Samsung has announced an even larger lineup of plasmas, and one of the most intriguing from a potential bang-for-the-buck proposition is the PNC590 series. It lacks the features--namely Internet connectivity and services--of its like-priced competition from Panasonic and LG, but makes up for it with promising specs. All told, however, C590 can't quite match either the 2010 Panasonic G series or the 2009 Samsungs we reviewed, despite delivering decent picture quality overall. Videophiles seeking a 2010 Samsung plasma might be better served higher in the company's lineup, but less discerning fans of the brand will have few complaints with the C590 series.
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Corner detail

Minimal styling cues keep the C590 classy.
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Stand detail

Samsung kept the slick transparent stand stalk from its 2009 models.
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Side view

We didn't mind one bit that the panel is thicker, at 2.8 inches, than the ones found on step-up Samsung plasmas
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Back panel inputs

Back panel connectivity is ample; that Ethernet jack is for firmware and local file streaming only.
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Side panel inputs

A fourth HDMI is located on the side, along with a second USB input.
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Remote control

The remote included with the PNC590, while similar in size, shape and button count to the one offered on step-up sets like the UNC8000 series, has one huge advantage. Instead of catering to slick looks with impossible-to-use, flush semi-keys, the C590's clicker has standard, raised buttons. We don't like the new grid layout as much as the better-differentiated cursor keys on last year's remotes, but at least that fingerprint-magnet finish is gone.
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Main picture settings menu

We're still fans of Samsung's transparent, explanation-equipped menu system.
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Tools menu

The Tools menu offers shortcuts to a few oft-used items.
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Allshare menu

The PNC590 lacks direct access to Inernet services like Netflix, but it can stream videos, music and photos from networked PCs (or USB sources).
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Eco Solution menu

Numerous power saving options are on-hand, but the C590 is less-efficient overall than Panasonic's 2010 G series.
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Screen burn protection menu

The C590 covers anti-burn-in well, but the screen saver didn't activate in our test.
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Picture Options menu

Samsung's Cinema Smooth mode is designed for 1080p/24 sources, but it didn't work well in our tests.
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White balance menu

Samsung omits a few of the user-menu options found on step-up models, including the color management and 10-point white balance systems, but there's still plenty for tweakers to adjust.
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Picture quality

Although its picture quality surpassed that of the like-priced LG PK750, the Samsung C590 series fell short of the Panasonic G20/25 series, as well as the Samsung plasmas we reviewed last year, in a couple of areas. Its black levels were only average, its color tended slightly but visibly toward blue, and its video processing failed the 1080p/24 test. Like all plasmas it trounces the uniformity and off-angle performance of just about every LCD, and while its screen reduces in-room reflections better than other Samsung plasmas we've tested, it doesn't maintain contrast as well under bright lights.

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