It's a funny kind of achievement,
but Pioneer's supreme skill at achieving an almost total absence of
light on its Kuro plasma TVs will be sorely missed.
The king of
thin is dead. In the face of a predicted record net loss of around £750
million this year, Pioneer has called a halt to its delectable Kuro
range of hi-def plasma TVs.
It's also the end for its new Kuro
LCD TVs, but early reviews suggest Pioneer was right in its original
assertion that plasma is by far the better tech for anyone after true
realism on a flat TV.
But should we be mourning the passing of
these luxury home cinema screens? Although they're undoubtedly the
finest flatscreen TVs around, most people cannot afford a Kuro.
For
at least £2,000 and £4,000 respectively, its 50-inch PDP-LX5090 and
60-inch PDP-LX6090 screens are the reserve of the wealthy. It's
projector, the KRF-9000FD - also dropped from the line-up along with
its LCD TVs - sells for north of £6,000.
You could argue it's
like the nationwide kerfuffle at the last flight of Concorde, an
occasion mourned even by those never likely to take a supersonic trip.
Worrying trend
But
the disappearance of Pioneer plasmas from the market does mark a
worrying trend in the world of flatscreen TVs, where making top-draw
products isn't enough to turn a profit.
The likes of Sony,
Panasonic and Toshiba have all posted losses recently that dwarf even
the turnover of the relatively tiny Pioneer, while the wobbly world
economy has already claimed Hitachi, who pulled-out of plasma last
month to concentrate solely on its Ultra Thin LCD line-up.
The
departure of Pioneer, a company that has more experience in the
flatscreen market than any other, is a sadder affair. Although Kuro -
Japanese for black - was then a distant marketing idea, it was Pioneer
that developed and sold the first high definition TV in 1999, long
before any other manufacturer cottoned onto the 'HD Ready' idea.
But
the announcement isn't as bad for flat TV hunters as it first appears.
Having announced almost a year ago that after a fourth year in the red
it was to stop manufacturing its own plasma panels, Pioneer had planned
to base its tenth-generation (G10) plasmas around panels made by
Panasonic.
Kuro's time was almost up before yesterday's
announcement. Despite its own panels being the secret behind the Kuro
screens' unique ability to achieve the true black so beloved of home
cinema aficionados, Pioneer had promised to work with Panasonic to
ensure the quality of the G10 screens matched its own very high
standards.
That idea is now dead in the water, with presumably
fairly advanced plans to release G10 screens in the UK late this year
now cancelled. In fact, when the deal was inked with Panasonic to
supply plasma panels, a lot of Pioneer's engineers left - in their
thousands - to join their new partner.
Panasonic steps up
At
January's CES in Las Vegas, Panasonic showed-off an ultra-thin 50-inch
plasma measuring just 8.8 mm in depth. Twelve months earlier it was a
Pioneer plasma of similar proportions that had the audience gaping.
Coincidence?
We can only speculate, just as we can but guess that Pioneer could now
make more money from licensing patents on its excellent Kuro plasma
technology than it ever could from manufacturing its own TVs.
10:35
Ali TariQ
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