Philips PVD700/37 Portable 7-Inch LCD TV, Black
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Average customer review:
(18 customer reviews)
Product Description
Philips Portable 7-Inch LCD TV PVD700
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #44371 in Home Theater
- Color: Black
- Brand: Philips
- Model: PVD700/37
- Released on: 2009-12-01
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 10.20" h x 10.00" w x 2.40" l, 2.60 pounds
- Display size: 7
Features
- Television Features: High Contrast and Brightness
- Maximum Resolution: 480 x 234
- Electronic Display Features: On-Screen Display, TFT Liquid Crystal Display
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Audio Features: Built-In Speakers
- Dimensions: Length: 6.1 "; Width: 7.9 "
- HD Compatibility: HD-Built-In HDTV/ATSC Tuner
- Includes: User Manual, Remote Control, AC/DC Power Adapter
- Input Type: Antenna, Headphone Jack
- Mounting Features: Built-In Stand
- Warranty Description: 1 Year Limited Manufacturer Warranty
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
39 of 40 people found the following review helpful.
Very good, small compact, good sound portable tv
By me ^_^
Hi everyone,
Just purchased this 7" Phillips TV for my mom for Christmas, it is very good. With the Digital conversion from analog to digital I was unsure if I would get one because I didn't know if it was going to get the channels. But to my amazement I did receive all of my channels here at the Metro-Houston Area. The small antenna does wonders; I was even able to pick up channels that I can't get on my regular TV.
It was ready to use, comes with a wall adapter, remote control, & built in battery last a little above the 2.5 hr mark. Remote control has no volume up or down and also can't turn off the TV; but my guess is since it is a small TV, why would you need a remote since you have to be close to it anyways ^_^. Haven't tested it in a moving vehicle but if I moved the antenna too much the TV says it can't pick up the channel so my guess is that in a moving vehicle it will be a little difficult to pick up channels.
All I wish now is for an SD slot, Mp3 slot, and DVD player; it will be great if Phillips decided to make one. :)Will recommend to all my friends.
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent Quality Portable, Some Shortcomings
By Dana R. Hyde
Our set was purchased through Amazon via Citi's ThankYou Rewards program. It's a well-made, high-performance portable with a few distinct design idiosyncrasies. Set-up is easy and intuitive, whether the remote control is used or not. If connected to cable, the PVD700 can index all Clear QAM digital signals and will automatically suppress display of encrypted discrete cable signals for which no picture is available. [We have a traditional analog/digital feed from Time Warner Cable, so digital pass-through signals from the broadcast stations were found, but cable-only networks like CNN were not. The PVD700/37 uses a legacy-free ATSC/QAM digital-only tuner; the digital signals for those channels are encrypted, requiring a cable box which this set absolutely can't handle.]
While auto-detect on the 75-ohm coaxial input can manage either over-the-air or digital cable signals by menu selection, there are no auxiliary line inputs (Composite, S-video, Component, or HDMI) whatsoever (any of which would have allowed for a cable box), and just a headphone jack output. A small cabinet like this one may not have room onboard for such, but I have seen suitable breakout-cable accessory solutions for this. I would love to have seen an SD-card slot; this set could also then function perfectly as a handy photo/video viewer. The included small portable antenna is convenient with its magnetic base, but it can pick up ONLY UHF-band ATSC signals. Channel aliasing is now very common, with many legacy VHF stations (2-13) now in fact digital in the UHF spectrum, but you must obtain a different type of antenna to receive any "real" VHF-spectrum signals on the PVD-700. [After the cord on our portable antenna wore out, I replaced it with a somewhat disappointing Philips SDV1225T/27 which features a bi-fold UHF element and VHF rabbit-ears. Fortunately, one local VHF station here also simulcasts its primary channel on the (-3)sub-feed of another UHF station it owns, and one other has its own local UHF digital repeater.] Channel memory is separate for cable and OTA but only the latter can be manually tweaked after an auto-scan.
The remote control is slender and attractive but with many small, narrow buttons. You can easily change channels or mute the sound, but you can't set volume or turn the set on/off, because the PVD700 has a rotary-thumbwheel potentiometer and a physical slide-switch instead of push-button controls like most modern TV's. However, this set is less remote-dependent than most devices; if the remote's Display menu button had been replicated on the TV then there would have been no functional dependency except for the channel-editing delete/favorite/hide performed by the remote's red/green/yellow buttons. Aspect ratio (4x3, 16x9, 16x9 movie) can be changed from the Display menu, or via a small dedicated key on the remote. This button should be larger and more conveniently placed, as this TV can't auto-preset it by channel or by program metadata (as my Zenith over-the-air converter box can).
If you own an iPad, iPod, or iPhone you are familiar with rechargeable devices having a non-replaceable battery; this Philips TV is also in that category. The very compact AC adapter charges the battery only when the power switch is set to "off"; a red LED indicator goes out when charging is complete. Three hours of playing time is expected; the Display menu has a 5-level power-save setting in addition to the regular brightness control. While the adapter is 9 volts (tip-positive) the set's power input will accept up to 12 volts, making the PVD700 car and RV-friendly. [However, ATSC signals were never designed for optimal reception inside a moving vehicle; your kids in the back are better off with DVD's.] An easel-stand pop-out is built-in for tabletop viewing, but the manual makes no mention of the pair of wall-mounting recesses on either side of it, or where suitable accessory hardware to fit them might be obtained.
Just add a protective carrying case with pouches for the antenna and AC adapter, and a 12-volt vehicle charging cord, and you will have a go-anywhere TV that won't disappoint. I have previously enjoyed Norelco and Magnavox products, and expect that long-term ownership of our PVD700/37 will be equally as satisfying.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
the best small portable TV
By J. Klekota
I purchased this tv for my husband to watch in the kitchen while cooking or outside while grilling. It is fantastic and worth every penny. The picture is fantastic and it even has a magnetic antenna. This was such a great gift that is very functional and now he can watch football anywhere he wants!







