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Choosing a new TV ~discuss~
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Richie-from-the-Boro
Posts: 6,945 Forumite

Best HDTV - a compendium .. .. .. is it LCD / PLASMA ?
Nowt much between them. 99% of people are going to get Plasma or LCD
- most new TV's are over 42" so most people should buy Plasma not LCD
- most makers measure contrast differently from each other, so the contrast argument is irrelevant
- most makers measure power consumption differently, hence the debate on which uses more leccy
- viewing angle, LCD's have more issues than plasmas
- MTBF both Plasma and LCD last about the same time
- Plasma's are cheaper that LCD's
- LCD's were originally intended for static display not moving video, hence lower refresh rates
- LCD TVs don't suffer burn-in, but can still suffer from a stuck pixel hence the ' dead pixel policy '
- Plasma's can suffer from ' burn in ' if left for extended periods on a static image such as a menu
- LCD's weigh half a Plasma average, they use a little less power, and run cooler than a Plasma
- Go to Curry's in the daytime you will prefer the LCD / Curry's in the nightime you will prefer the Plasma
- most [ but not all ] set's you see in the sheds are pre-set to ' vibrant ' ? wanna sell it - dress it in it's best frock !
- a 1080p panel is best, avoid 1080i panels scaling, pixel mapping, and inter / de-interlacing will reduce 720p to less than 720p
- many top end plasma's including the panny's do not deal with SD [ 576i ] very well and that’s the Freeview / Freesat SD broadcast point
- most people would not begin to understand D65 imaging standards, let alone be able to calibrate them
Clarification for those who need it - HDTV [#1] / HD Ready [#2] / HD Compatible [#3]
clarification for the above [ weegie.geek ] will, after editing be inserted here
A - decide how much £spend, select 4 or 5 within the budget, read as many reviews / come to this and other forum's for info
B - go to a megga store (day) and compare, try to see the same sets dimly lit and you may well change your mind
C - narrow your choice to two and make your decision, but remember D & E below
D - we all have different preferences / colour / brightness / sun facing TV position / vision impairment / shape of the room / distance from the set
E - the human eye [ the ones in your head ] should make the final decision, not forum's / price / specifications etc
10 years after flat screens came out only half the UK has one, even if 3DTV does take off, it won’t become commonplace in the living room for perhaps the same or longer time span, if your a drug dealer buy three and give yourself a ' bling ' moment. OLED the plastic pixel display, has even less chance, if any of ever being seen in a recession. LED's are just LCD with a different type of backlight, but the same LED problems [ though they are showing a year on year improvement ] of poor black levels, blurry motion depiction, and narrow viewing angles.
Last comment
Price point selling of mid range [ that's the one we all buy - even though we tell ourselves we bought top~0~the~range ] TV's is aggressive, the component parts of all sets in this range means makers now have a predisposition to use cheap[er] internals and are increasingly liable to fail, over often nothing more than a 20p capacitor. Try then to get as long a warranty as you can afford, but get a copy and read the small print before you sign up to it, most have more ' cop out's ' than a politician's expense sheet.
Don't rush it, make your mind up - there's nowt much between them. 99% of people are going to get Plasma or LCD
~discuss~
edit 4 later - clarification for [ #35 Hammyman 27-06-2010, 10:53 PM ] this after editing be inserted somewhere - CRT issue:
CRTs always did and will continue to produce the best outcome from an SD feed. Plasma however seems to be the best alternative.
Screen size has a huge influence on output, two identical same brand / same tech / same input signal sets will produce a different outcome. A 21" will always look better than a 42" because the artefacts become more obviously twice the size, this is especially the case in SD because the HD output makes inequalities in the source signal input more obvious as opposed to the blurred out bit on SD CRTs.
CRTs operate interlaced @ 576i as does HDTV @ 1080i but Plasmas and LCDs work at the progressive level this gives a much better picture but introduces other issues an interlaced input feed that needs to be de interlaced can of its very self introduce unwelcome artefacts when scaling to the native 1080p. HD ready TVs as opposed to HDTVs often produce a better outcome for SD only feeds because there is less scaling to do.
Quality & bit rate, the feed issue, CRTs were designed for SD. Plasma and LCD design intention was for HD so whist SD can be accommodated [ can-we-do-it-yes-we-can] on large LCDs and Plasmas it was never a research and development requirement to make SD as good as HD, only that, it was capable of producing an acceptable picture !
Viewing distance on Plasma LCDs, same screen, same eyes, different distance. HD looks good both ways and even when close up. With SD however you would have to move away from the screen to produce better results.
Nowt much between them. 99% of people are going to get Plasma or LCD
- most new TV's are over 42" so most people should buy Plasma not LCD
- most makers measure contrast differently from each other, so the contrast argument is irrelevant
- most makers measure power consumption differently, hence the debate on which uses more leccy
- viewing angle, LCD's have more issues than plasmas
- MTBF both Plasma and LCD last about the same time
- Plasma's are cheaper that LCD's
- LCD's were originally intended for static display not moving video, hence lower refresh rates
- LCD TVs don't suffer burn-in, but can still suffer from a stuck pixel hence the ' dead pixel policy '
- Plasma's can suffer from ' burn in ' if left for extended periods on a static image such as a menu
- LCD's weigh half a Plasma average, they use a little less power, and run cooler than a Plasma
- Go to Curry's in the daytime you will prefer the LCD / Curry's in the nightime you will prefer the Plasma
- most [ but not all ] set's you see in the sheds are pre-set to ' vibrant ' ? wanna sell it - dress it in it's best frock !
- a 1080p panel is best, avoid 1080i panels scaling, pixel mapping, and inter / de-interlacing will reduce 720p to less than 720p
- many top end plasma's including the panny's do not deal with SD [ 576i ] very well and that’s the Freeview / Freesat SD broadcast point
- most people would not begin to understand D65 imaging standards, let alone be able to calibrate them
Clarification for those who need it - HDTV [#1] / HD Ready [#2] / HD Compatible [#3]
clarification for the above [ weegie.geek ] will, after editing be inserted here
A - decide how much £spend, select 4 or 5 within the budget, read as many reviews / come to this and other forum's for info
B - go to a megga store (day) and compare, try to see the same sets dimly lit and you may well change your mind
C - narrow your choice to two and make your decision, but remember D & E below
D - we all have different preferences / colour / brightness / sun facing TV position / vision impairment / shape of the room / distance from the set
E - the human eye [ the ones in your head ] should make the final decision, not forum's / price / specifications etc
10 years after flat screens came out only half the UK has one, even if 3DTV does take off, it won’t become commonplace in the living room for perhaps the same or longer time span, if your a drug dealer buy three and give yourself a ' bling ' moment. OLED the plastic pixel display, has even less chance, if any of ever being seen in a recession. LED's are just LCD with a different type of backlight, but the same LED problems [ though they are showing a year on year improvement ] of poor black levels, blurry motion depiction, and narrow viewing angles.
Last comment
Price point selling of mid range [ that's the one we all buy - even though we tell ourselves we bought top~0~the~range ] TV's is aggressive, the component parts of all sets in this range means makers now have a predisposition to use cheap[er] internals and are increasingly liable to fail, over often nothing more than a 20p capacitor. Try then to get as long a warranty as you can afford, but get a copy and read the small print before you sign up to it, most have more ' cop out's ' than a politician's expense sheet.
Don't rush it, make your mind up - there's nowt much between them. 99% of people are going to get Plasma or LCD
~discuss~
edit 4 later - clarification for [ #35 Hammyman 27-06-2010, 10:53 PM ] this after editing be inserted somewhere - CRT issue:
CRTs always did and will continue to produce the best outcome from an SD feed. Plasma however seems to be the best alternative.
Screen size has a huge influence on output, two identical same brand / same tech / same input signal sets will produce a different outcome. A 21" will always look better than a 42" because the artefacts become more obviously twice the size, this is especially the case in SD because the HD output makes inequalities in the source signal input more obvious as opposed to the blurred out bit on SD CRTs.
CRTs operate interlaced @ 576i as does HDTV @ 1080i but Plasmas and LCDs work at the progressive level this gives a much better picture but introduces other issues an interlaced input feed that needs to be de interlaced can of its very self introduce unwelcome artefacts when scaling to the native 1080p. HD ready TVs as opposed to HDTVs often produce a better outcome for SD only feeds because there is less scaling to do.
Quality & bit rate, the feed issue, CRTs were designed for SD. Plasma and LCD design intention was for HD so whist SD can be accommodated [ can-we-do-it-yes-we-can] on large LCDs and Plasmas it was never a research and development requirement to make SD as good as HD, only that, it was capable of producing an acceptable picture !
Viewing distance on Plasma LCDs, same screen, same eyes, different distance. HD looks good both ways and even when close up. With SD however you would have to move away from the screen to produce better results.
Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ
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Comments
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Ah, you started a new thread with it. I'll post my reply here too then.Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most new TV's are over 42" so most people should buy Plasma not LCD
Eh? Plenty of people are buying screens under 42".- most makers measure contrast differently from each other, so the contrast argument is irrelevant- most makers measure power consumption differently, hence the debate on which uses more leccy- Plasma's are cheaper that LCD's- Plasma's can suffer from ' burn in ' if left for extended periods on a static image such as a menu- LCD's weigh half a Plasma average, they use a little less power, and run cooler than a Plasma
Clarification for those who need it - HDTV[#1] / HD Ready [#2] / HD Compatible [#3]
#1 can display HD images via various external & internal sources, and does have an embedded HD tuner / TV ariel HD
#2 can display HD images via various external sources, does not have an embedded HD tuner
#3 does not have a HD panel, but can accept a HD signal from audio / video inA - decide how much £spend, select 4 or 5 within the budget, read as many reviews / come to this and other forum's for infoThey say it's genetic, they say he can't help it, they say you can catch it - but sometimes you're born with it0 -
Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most new TV's are over 42" so most people should buy Plasma not LCD
Theres quite a few very good 46" and even 52" LCD screens. After that id definitely be buying a plasmaRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most makers measure contrast differently from each other, so the contrast argument is irrelevantRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most makers measure power consumption differently, hence the debate on which uses more leccyRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- LCD's were originally intended for static display not moving video, hence lower refresh ratesRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- Go to Curry's in the daytime you will prefer the LCD / Curry's in the nightime you will prefer the PlasmaRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most [ but not all ] set's you see in the sheds are pre-set to ' vibrant ' ? wanna sell it - dress it in it's best frock !Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- many top end plasma's including the panny's do not deal with SD [ 576i ] very well and that’s the Freeview / Freesat SD broadcast pointRichie-from-the-Boro wrote: »- most people would not begin to understand D65 imaging standards, let alone be able to calibrate them
For the basic user, they should switch off all the extra processing modes (Contrast enhance, DNR etc). Use a THX disc to calibrate contrast and brightness. Switch to 'cinema' mode and 'warm2' settings (generally speaking these are closest 'out of the box' settings, to the D65 standard)Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »the component parts of all sets in this range means they use cheap internals and often do fail over often a 2 quid capacitor.:idea:0 -
Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »Price point selling of mid range [ that's the one we all buy - even though we tell ourselves we bought top~0~the~range ] TV's is aggressive, the component parts of all sets in this range means they use cheap internals and often do fail over often a 2 quid capacitor. Try then to get as long a warranty as you can afford, but get a copy and read the small print before you sign up to it, most have more ' cop out's ' than a politician's expense sheet.
~discuss~
I thought TV's were more reliable these days and most guarantees were not worth the money.
Is it worth paying £100 for a 5 year guarantee on a £400 set? John Lewis do them free and Richer Sounds charge 10%.
You should automatically get a free one year guarantee and you should be able to stretch this much longer if you quote 'fit for purpose' to the supplier. Mind you, most suppliers will try to stonewall you after a year.0 -
I thought TV's were more reliable these days and most guarantees were not worth the money.
Is it worth paying £100 for a 5 year guarantee on a £400 set? John Lewis do them free and Richer Sounds charge 10%.
You should automatically get a free one year guarantee and you should be able to stretch this much longer if you quote 'fit for purpose' to the supplier. Mind you, most suppliers will try to stonewall you after a year.
If you had asked me the question at Easter I would have agreed with you. Indeed I spent at least a decade arguing the opposite.
- Most sets [ a guess based on 42" + ] purchased cost £700-900
- Extended 5 year warranties can be had for £150(-)
- The price point competition in the 40"+ area is driving down the quality of components used
- The % of sets breaking down from good manufacturers seems [ non-scientific ] to be increasing
So I agree that any extra money on extending a warranty on a sub £400 set is a waste of money, I am advocating that £10% spent on a five year extension cover for a set costing £800 to £1000 as a good idea because of the makers determined use of low tolerance cheaper electronic parts.
I recently [ it's somewhere on this forum ] had a good quality 42" 13 month old Sammy Plasma go bust, just out of warranty, because of a couple of 80 pence capacitors, the caps used had almost no tolerance whatsoever and were on the very edge of their capability when the set was designed / built.
I found that thousands or many tens of thousands worldwide had exactly the same problem Samsung denied, and continue to deny it was anything to do with them. Further trawling of the interweb identified that the ' cheap component mortality ' issue applies to other manufacturers and is not exclusive to Samsung. For this reason then I decided to revise my stubbornly held view that the warrantable option should be a serious consideration for sets costing £800+Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ0 -
weegie.geek wrote: »Ah, you started a new thread with it. I'll post my reply here too then.
This whole section is nonsense, sorry. Don't be sorry weegie.geek .. .. .. criticism is welcome, can toy clarify then please !
Reviews are paramount, but stick to respected sites. Some are clearly less independent than others.
[#1] / HD Ready [#2] / HD Compatible [#3]
#1 can display HD images via various external & internal sources, and does have an embedded HD tuner / TV ariel HD
#2 can display HD images via various external sources, does not have an embedded HD tuner
#3 does not have a HD panel, but can accept a HD signal from audio / video in
This whole section is nonsense, sorry. Don't be sorry weegie.geek - criticism with clarification is welcome
I thought the HD compatible didn't have an actual HD panel but were able to accept a HD signal via / audio and video inputs / scart etc.
.. .. .. and that
HDTV & HD Ready were essentially the same thing but the HDTV has built in tuners [ SAT & Terra ] which makes HDTV the only one of the three that has the inbuilt ability to receive FTA / SAT without the need for any external input.
.. .. .. what's you take then ?Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ0 -
None of the terms necessitate a built-in tuner.
HD Compatible = mostly used on cheaper projectors, older plasmas. Things with low resolution displays like 1024*1024 *, 800*600 etc. Anything that can't actually display 1280*720 as a minimum. HD *Compatible* because it has HDMI/displayport/component input and can accept and HD signal. It just downscales it to be able to display it.
HD Ready = Something that can display at least 1280*720 without being able to display 1080p. Basically anything that is between 1280*720 (so 720p) and 1920*1080 (so 1080p). Again these will downscale 1080p/i but not 720p.
FullHD = something that can display 1080p or above. If the panel can do 1920*1080 then it's FullHD. You won't tend to see resolutions above that in panels meant for TVs but there are some higher res panels meant for PC use that give 2650*1600 or above.
* Technically 1024*1024 is able to be labelled as HD Ready, since it has 720 or more vertical lines. To be able to use the HD Ready logo, that's all you need. A lot of people think that's pretty disingenuous. If I feed it 1280*720 then I want it to display each pixel, I don't want any scaling down at all. I know different displays have different pixel shapes, but the bottom line is that it's not able to display all 1280 horizontal lines.They say it's genetic, they say he can't help it, they say you can catch it - but sometimes you're born with it0 -
Richie-from-the-Boro wrote: »I recently [ it's somewhere on this forum ] had a good quality 42" 13 month old Sammy Plasma go bust, just out of warranty, because of a couple of 80 pence capacitors, the caps used had almost no tolerance whatsoever and were on the very edge of their capability when the set was designed / built.
If by 'just out of warranty' you mean 13-18 months you should have had no difficulty getting it repaired free using 'not fit for purpose' or local Trading Standards if the supplier does not agree.
I take your point about cheap parts though and I would now most probably get a 5 year guarantee for a tv over £600. I would try John Lewis first though as they give them free!0 -
If by 'just out of warranty' you mean 13-18 months you should have had no difficulty getting it repaired free using 'not fit for purpose' or local Trading Standards if the supplier does not agree.
I take your point about cheap parts though and I would now most probably get a 5 year guarantee for a tv over £600. I would try John Lewis first though as they give them free!
- agreed on the John Lewis thing, they are one of the few companies that old retailers used to hold to - that of the ' spirit ' of retail shops. Trying to help a customer not just because they have to but because they want to give a good experience and earn customer loyalty by good prices and good after sales support.Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ0 -
John Lewis guarantee ~
Ive never used them myself, but reading on the net, MANY people have had problems when trying to claim:idea:0 -
Richie
I'm sorry that I found your original post difficult to read because the pedant in me hates the use of LCD's instead of LCDs, when it is simply a plural!
Other examples: TV's, plasma's, set's, it's, forum's, LED's, cop out's and (eek!) Curry's! None of these should have an apostrophe in the context in which you use them.
(Fortunately the actual content was pretty good...!):beer:0
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