The set looks presentable enough, with thin bezel, metallic edge trim and stylised ribbon stand. Connections comprise three HDMI (with ARC and MHL support), a trio of USB, SCART, a shared component/composite input, plus digital audio output and ethernet. Wi-Fi is built-in and there are both Freeview HD and DVB-S satellite tuners. The LG 47LB730V model reviewed here is also available in 65-, 60-, 55- and 42-inch screen sizes, so you can’t say you’re not spoilt for choice.

LG 47LB730V: remote control

The screen also comes with both a standard IR wand and the latest iteration of LG’s Magic Remote control. This Bluetooth pointer manages that rare trick of actually placing the cursor onscreen in a position that relates to the way you’re hold the gyroscopic remote. The result is a naturalistic way of navigating. LG’s Smart+ webOS (to give it its full monicker) is rather different from rival connected platforms. It doesn’t feel like a bolt-on feature for one thing. From the TV guide and menus to the choice of fonts, all elements of the navigation are uniform. There’s also irreverence to the interface, from the Bean Bird mascot set-up routine to jaunty launch bar. LG has actually succeeded in making Smart functionality fun!

LG 47LB730V: simple UI

While the UI appears simple, there are deep tricks here that rival Smart TVs can’t match. With webOS you can watch iPlayer or YouTube, pause and flick over to live TV, and then return and carry on with the stream. This ability to treat IPTV just as you would linear content is a revelation in usability. File playback compatibility is solidly useful; we successfully unspooled AVI, MKV, MOV and MP4 video material. Audio playback is more limited, compatible with WAV and MP3. Image quality is good, with caveats. The TV doesn’t quite do full black, more dark grey, but this is more noticeable in full dark-room conditions. Like all LED-lit LCD sets, subjective black-level performance improves with some ambient light. Edge lighting is a tad uneven though. Motion handling is fine, provided you stick with the Clear Plus setting. This maintains resolution up to 1080 lines without undue artefacting, making it a great mode for sport. The set’s 3D performance is strangely problematic. The panel appears extremely directional and it’s virtually impossible to keep the entire screen free of double imaging. When the top of the panel appears tight and clean, the bottom double images, and vice versa. There is 3D Viewpoint adjustment, but this doesn’t offer the latitude to cope. Two pairs of passive glasses are included in the box. The LG’s audio performance is more functional than fabulous. There’s not overmuch stereo separation and volume is limited, despite a 2 x 12 W amplifier specification. We suspect you’ll probably want to invest in a soundbar at some point. See Best Smart TVs: the best Smart TVs of 2014.