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Up Close with Panasonic’s 150-inch Plasma
Besides its obvious size, we examine the features and specs of this giant plasma.
September 26, 2008 | by Peter Suciu

The feeling of heading to see it was reminiscent of those movies where a scientist is hustled to a top secret location to see some marvelous discovery. And while the location for this event isn’t all that top secret, seeing what Panasonic had to show was still a sight to behold.

After walking through the winding hallways of Panasonic’s New Jersey corporate offices, past a few security card readers and then another long and surprisingly wide hallway that leads to the company’s warehouse you’re there. Countless TVs and other consumer electronics have passed through these doors, but here is where Panasonic has set up a staging area to offer a select few a chance to behold its latest beast. It is the company’s prototype 150-inch plasma TV.

While Panasonic provided a peek of this behemoth at CES, it is hard to appreciate much on the show floor, where everything is big and loud, and more importantly how awe and wonder are part of what “stays in Vegas.” Thus seeing this HDTV up close and personal is so much more impressive, even if the demo area is still just located in a warehouse. Apparently even Panasonic isn’t quite sure how you best utilize a TV set of this size.

Equally surreal was seeing the suddenly now-so-small 103-inch plasma set, which had been wheeled off to make way for this much bigger brother. Seeing that set off in the corner just served as a reminder on how fast TVs are getting bigger and bigger.

To really prove that point my Panasonic hosts were however kind enough to wheel back in the still massively large 103-inch set for a side-by-side comparison. The fact is that the 150-inch makes all other TVs seem small, even on that is twice the size of most TVs sold today.

And rightfully so; with 150-inch screen size (measured diagonally as all TVs are), it is actually 137-inches wide or 11-feet five inches, and it is 82-inches or just under seven feet tall! More impressive is that this set is made from a single panel of glass, the so-called “mother glass” from which five 50-inch panels would be cut. That makes for a massive 1,700 pounds for just the glass, and with the accompanying shipping container this set’s travel weight is 2,800 pounds. When this set arrives at retail would be buyers should probably expect a hefty shipping cost in excess of what a 37-inch LCD TV costs these days. And let’s not even think about the fuel surcharge!

But before you decide to mortgage the house – or rob a bank – to buy one, you’ll have to hold off a bit. Currently, there are two 150-inch panels in the New Jersey location, and one of those will soon be heading to Dubai. Three more prototypes are quite big in Japan in more ways than one. The retail versions won’t likely be ready until the 2009 prime time season makes its debut in about a year.



About the Author:
Peter Suciu
Peter Suciu is a New York based freelance writer who has covered consumer electronics, technology, electronic entertainment and the toy industry for more than a decade. His work has appeared in more than three dozen publications including Newsweek, PC Magazine, Laptop, PC Upgrade, Wired, FHM, SPIN, VIBE, The New York Daily News and Computer Games.


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Comments (4) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by Steven  on  09/27/08  at  08:49 PM

I’ll take 3 thanks

Posted by elmo  on  09/27/08  at  12:35 PM

Will Panny have a wall mount for this?

Posted by joemama127  on  09/26/08  at  10:51 AM

Wow...just wow. As much as I think it would be cool to have a plasma that big...even if I had the spare change for something like that I would go for a nice front projection setup for anything over 60”.

Also, funny how you mention in the article:

“Panasonic won’t be offering a composite slot, because frankly standard definition, low resolution content can’t possibly look very good.”

Yet Panasonic chose to use a Nintendo Wii (only capable of 480p) to show off gaming on such a monster? I guess Panasonic doesn’t want to use a PS3 because it competes with it’s own Blu-ray players but...at least they could have snagged a Xbox 360 and played one of the better looking games @1080p.

Posted by Shawn  on  09/26/08  at  09:37 AM

I am guessing this doesn’t have a standard AC plug for the average home. Likely takes more than the 1875 watts of your standard 15A home branch circuit in your living room. LOL. The heat output (AC cooling increase) and electric bill to run this thing is going to suck. But I guess $500+ monthly electric bills for the person who can afford this is likely no big deal.



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