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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Author
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Topic: Plasma Screen TVs -- Still not doing real HD
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Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."
Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 05-01-2004 02:35 PM
I received a new advertising magazine in the mail from Ultimate Electronics today (they have a sister chain called Soundtrack in places like Colorado). There were lots and lots of ads for various HDTV models.
One ad standout was Mitsubishi's 61" PD-6130, yours for only $16,999. Just like many of the past plasma-screen and LCD screen ads, there is rarely any mention ever for the native pixel layout of the monitor. This is exactly the opposite of the advertising model for computer monitors where the maximum resolution of the screen is spelled out in an easy to understand number (such as 1600 X 1200, 1920 X 1200, etc.).
Most anyone looking to spend several thousand dollars on a new plasma screen TV may know the 1080i HD pixel specification is 1920 X 1080. The ad people never publish the number the flat panel screens carry since they never meet that number. The nearest mention I saw in the Ultimate Electronics flyer was "720p capable resolution," and that was for a monitor Pioneer was selling for $7000. There was a good number of flat panel LCD TVs that were described as "EDTVs". I suppose that means they don't even come close to the 720p specification. More likely, many are just 480 X 800 or something like that.
Incidentally, I was able to find the native pixel layout for Mitsubishi's 61" plasma screen on their website: 1365 X 768. Well, sorry. I don't have $17,000 to blow on a plasma screen, but even if I did I would not waste it on a so-called HDTV that really didn't hit the full HDTV specification.
To finish, what monitors are sold to the market which actually hit a real 1920 X 1080 pixel specification? There is a broad assumption that rear projection and CRT based HDTVs do fully address the 1920 X 1080 specification. However, the rear projection TVs show an image that's just a tad on the soft side even though there is lots of detail shown. The CRT displays show a really sharp, boldly colorful image, but they don't get very large in size. I guess if I were going to buy an HD set today, I would probably just get a Sony VEGA 34" HD capable TV.
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Mark Gulbrandsen
Resident Trollmaster
Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 05-02-2004 09:58 AM
"I received a new advertising magazine in the mail from Ultimate Electronics today (they have a sister chain called Soundtrack in places like Colorado)."
Stay away from that chain completely!! I am having a go around with them right now. Some lazy moron that works at the Salt Lake City Brickyard store forgot to send my Mits HDTV tuner into Mits for repair. What it turns out is exactly what I expected is that they just wanted to sell me a new one. So far I've had to threaten them just to get any action on it at all. After waiting for about two months I called them and asked them what was taking so long....The reply, that person is not in today, he's on vacation but will be back next week. I asked why it was necessary to talk to that particuluar person at all and didn't Ultimatte know what was going on with it without me talking to that guy? After several more calls back and forth to the store with no results I got angry and threatened the guy at the toher end of the phone with legal action. So I finally get a call back from the store manager.... "Yours can't be repaired but we can sell you a new tuner at a killer deal", about $340.00. Well, little did he know that before I had taken the tuner in to them that I had talked to Mits about the tuner and they told me that it can be repaired but has to come back in for repair... as no local service stations are repairing tuners. Mits asked me to take it back where I bought it so I did. Anyway when I told the manager that info, which I had also told to the sales guy that took it in for repair, he said he would call me back tommrrow. Well low and behold he did call back and said it was possible to repair it and the cost would be 280.00. I told him to get it done and quick. It had already been sitting at Ultimatte for two months. So far its been another month of waiting. The reason this one HAS to be repaired is because its a first generation set and tuner that uses more video and sync signals going into the set. R,G,B,H,V as compared to todays sets that use only three signals. Of course I did explain this to the original guy that took it in for repair as well and he was aware of the differences.....
Basically no one at this store did their job until I threatened them, all they wanted to do was sell me a new one. Pretty pathetic way to treat a customer that spent over 6K on this set several years ago!
Mark
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Evans A Criswell
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1579
From: Huntsville, AL, USA
Registered: Mar 2000
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posted 05-06-2004 01:51 PM
quote: Bobby Henderson There is a broad assumption that rear projection and CRT based HDTVs do fully address the 1920 X 1080 specification. However, the rear projection TVs show an image that's just a tad on the soft side even though there is lots of detail shown.
Most rear-projection CRT-based HDTVs do display 1080i with 1080 scan lines, but typically only show 1440 or 1280 pixels horizontally across the picture since the 7 inch CRTs used in the TVs can't resolve more than that anyway. Sometimes, the pictures look a bit soft if the convergence isn't quite right or if the set isn't calibrated properly. It takes some test patterns and a little work to get those sets displaying the best picture possible. I've had a 57-inch Sony that displayed 1440 by 1080 using 7-inch CRTs and a 57-inch Hitachi that displays 1280 by 1080 using similar 7-inch CRTs. I love the rear-projection picture because black can be made black and when watching in a dark room, a picture with great contrast range can be shown. All you have to do is adjust the white-level to a comfortable level and have the black level set right and you'll get a great picture that looks more like a movie theatre picture than with other sets.
Of course, most people that buy HDTV sets are simply using them to watch 480i signals over cable or 480i/480p signals from DVD players. Nearly any HDTV that does a decent job of upscaling to 540p, 720p, 768p, 960i, or 1080i, will make the DVD look great, even if the resolution is only 1280 by 768.
I bought a 17-inch widescreen (16:9) LCD monitor to replace an aging CRT monitor that was having brightness fluctuation problems. The new LCD monitor produces a good image of high contrast (600:1) -- even in a totally dark room, and although its upscaling of 480i material to 768p (1280 by 768) isn't the best in the world, it looks fantastic. The monitor has component, S-Video, and composite video inputs as well as a VGA input and built in TV tuner (with cable compatibility). It makes a great little multipurpose portable TV/monitor. This model has the ability to show 4:3 with black on the sides or stretch it to 16:9 or zoom so that letterboxed 4:3 can fill the screen. I like it, since all types of DVDs can be played in proper aspect using the most screen possible.
I think the main reason HDTV and porjector manufacturers are stuck at the 1280 by 768 or 1024 by 768 resolution for now is most people are using the devices to watch DVDs and 480i broadcasts and not HDTV.
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