postheadericon LCD HD TV Full HD 1080p and Plasma Televisions

postheadericon LCD TV Explained

1080p LCD HD TV will be a revolution to you if you come from a background of watching standard analogue TV.

LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) technology is used in most flat screen televisions of today. LCD TVs have flat light panels composed of many millions of transistor light filters. Each filter makes up a primary colour and the total effect of all the filters is to produce a full colour picture. The light source is provided by a white display tube in the back of the panel.

DLP(tm), by Texus Instruments, is a semiconductor chip operating on mirrors and a colour wheel. The chip affords better dark levels and a closer packing of the image pixels.

Appreciation of the HD TV image quality can be like saying 'Looks are in the eye of the beholder'. There are some reasons why one technology may win out over another depending upon how you use your TV.

Colour Distortion - DLP can suffer from colour distortion due to the viewing angle. At more extreme angles the balance of colours will not be as true compared to the same seating positions viewing a LCD screen. This will be important if you fix your HD TV screen onto the wall because the viewing positions may change in future but the wall position will be less likely to change.

Black contrast levels make a big difference, depending upon what you are viewing. White is only white if seen in contrast to black. True deep black levels are as important as bright white levels. Contrast dark levels are measured as a proportion by which the light can be switched hard on and completely off. LCD equipment is measured as 5000 bright to a minimum one dark thus 5000:1 contrast ratio. DLP HD TV have a small advantage but you may only appreciate the difference with high quality movie scenes showing deep differences in light levels. New LCD technologies with much larger LCD panel fabrications are removing any such differences.

Viewing Distance This is subject to personal taste but generally you should be seated between 1.5 and 2 times the diagonal width of the screen. It also depends upon the use of the the HD TV - games with control cords comes to mind.

The complete picture to quality LCD HD TV will always depend upon all the components of a system. A DVD player with 720 pixels will better translate to a pixel screen resolution which also matches 720 pixels. A Blu-Ray DVD movie will feed the HD TV with the sound and vision to properly appreciate it. The advantage of picture resolution may not be appreciated if you are simply viewing close up facial shots. Many of such TV shots will be blurred in the background and transmitted in a compressed way where some fine details are lost.

LCD HD TV conclusion is to purchase and spend only to your requirements. If you appreciate HD TV movies then, at some point in time, the movies will be released in Blu-Ray format and you will appreciate the quality normally found in larger screen formats.

If you appreciate HD TV quality then check out the larger screen format specifications against the smaller screen sizes. Will you notice the difference?

Aspect ratio 1080p HD TV has a width:height ratio of 16:9. Analogue TV is 4:3 and you may want to check your DVD movie stocks for this new 16:9 format.

Resolution HD TV is high resolution with 1920 x 1080 pixels. Analogue TV is low quality being non-digital and having only 625 lines across the screen.

1080p Frame rate the whole screen is rewritten as one complete scanned picture 60 times a second so no flicker. Analogue TV is 25 frames per second and the line drawing is spit into two parts.

How long would a picture last if you pointed a HD TV camera at the same picture on a HD TV screen? Not long because the settings of your television will be adjusted to your preferences and your circumstances. All that one can really say is that the larger screen sizes, carrying a higher price, will have the electronics required to produce the better picture.

The 1080p progressive method of television picture, at 60 frames per second, is an improvement but as always it depends. The whole system has to be of this standard to produce such quality images and the old expression: 'Garbage-In-Garbage-Out' comes to mind.

Having said this, because the 1080p HD TV is the current high standard then it makes sense to purchase this standard and let the rest of the equipment catch up over time.

1080i HD TV is HD TV using what is called 'interlacing'. Interlacing is similar to the old analogue way of scanning odd and even lines. The updating of the pixel dots takes longer then 1080p. When you have rapid movement upon the screen then the image can fall out of date and the resolution will not appear as good as it should.

When purchasing HD TV technology it is good to keep in mind that older 1080i HD TVs may not be in current production. When this happens the manufacturer may only retain a stock of parts for say, seven years beyond last production date. One or two of those years could have already have gone for a 1080i TV!

For main family viewing choose HD TV 1080p rather than HD TV 1080i. If budget is tight then there may be some discount offers on HD TV 1080i TVs. You will loose out on smoother, cleaner image. This is especially with fast moving sports and other rapid movement TV images.

Last Updated (Tuesday, 27 July 2010 21:19)

Read more...

 

postheadericon Compare 1080p vs 720p, 1080p vs 1080i

Make a comparison of 1080p vs 720p resolutions. View them as if they were viewed on a fixed-pixel 1080p display.

These images should be viewed at full size to properly compare them. Other factors such as contrast ratio and viewing angle should also be considered.

Compare HD TV 1080p to standard resolution pictures

Please bear in mind that your current PC monitor may be of older standard. Your monitor is unlikely to be calibrated and true to colour.

Last Updated (Tuesday, 27 July 2010 20:57)

 

postheadericon HDMI Cable

Choose a gold HDMI cable because gold is a metal which offers least resistance to electricity. Gold HDMI connectors will connect your HD TV equipment with better signal connections. Gold does not corrode/tarnish. Tarnish on the plug and socket pins will create electrical noise and resistance. Remember the cable length. A cable which is too long may pick up on electrical noise from other equipment you have in your HD TV entertainment world.

Cable tidies really help.

Cable tidy can be reused and is easy to handleEasy to handle cable tidies

There is nothing worse than having to unplug everything just to untangle one unsightly cable. By the time you have all of your HD TV equipment connected you can expect six or more cables.

 

Which HDMI cable version is best - HDMI 1.3a, HDMI 1.3b or HDMI 1.3c ... what a confusion?
Thankfully, the HDMI version should not matter to you see: HDMI difference between HDMI versions. This is simply technical jargon. All that need concern you is simply HDMI version 1.3a and beyond. The standards are set in version 1.3a of HDMI cabling. Any additional version levels are used internally, by the manufacturer, to show their compliance to test standards.

If the cable quality exceeds your equipment quality then you can end up with problems.  Digital cable will perform well and the largest loss of signal will be on the plug ends.  Having gold plated plug ends makes sense but if the cable is fully shielded then it makes the cable bulky, stiff and puts a stress on the HD equipment socket.  Move the HD kit in and out frequently and the sockets may break when using a stiff over specified cable.  You would have to have lower end quality HD equipment for this to happen.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 28 July 2010 14:46)

 

postheadericon Full 1080p HD TV Selection

p2 B

Last Updated (Wednesday, 28 July 2010 08:06)

 

postheadericon Wall Bracket Mounting

p1

Last Updated (Wednesday, 28 July 2010 12:52)

 
HD TV product search
Full HD LCD HD TV

LCD HD TV Full 1080p HD
page: 1 (1) > 5
Samsung LE32C530 32" Widescreen Full HD 1080p 50Hz LCD TV
Samsung LE32C530 32-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p Make:Samsung
New:£311.89
New/Used:£262.71
View Samsung
Sony Bravia KDL32EX403U 32" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with Freeview HD
Sony Bravia KDL32EX403U 32-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£399.99
New/Used:£339.00
View Sony
Toshiba 32RV753B 32" Widescreen Full HD 1080p Digital LCD TV with Freeview HD
Toshiba 32RV753B 32-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p Make:Toshiba
New:£329.99
View Toshiba
Sony Bravia KDL40EX403U 40" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with Freeview HD
Sony Bravia KDL40EX403U 40-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£508.70
New/Used:£483.29
View Sony
LG 42LD450 42" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with  Freeview
LG 42LD450 42-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV Make:LG
New:£415.32
View LG
Sony Bravia KDL40EX401U 40" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with Freeview
Sony Bravia KDL40EX401U 40-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£479.99
New/Used:£389.99
View Sony
Sony Bravia KDL37EX401U 37" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with Freeview
Sony Bravia KDL37EX401U 37-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£439.99
New/Used:£370.00
View Sony
Sony Bravia KDL40EX503U 40" Widescreen Full HD 1080p 100Hz LCD TV with Freeview HD
Sony Bravia KDL40EX503U 40-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£646.57
View Sony
Samsung LE40C580 40" Widescreen Full HD 1080p Allshare LCD TV with Freeview HD
Samsung LE40C580 40-inch Widescreen Full HD 1080p Make:Samsung
New:£443.99
View Samsung
Sony Bravia KDL32EX401U 32" Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD TV with Digital Freeview
Sony Bravia KDL32EX401U 32-inch Widescreen Full HD Make:Sony
New:£349.99
New/Used:£305.32
View Sony
 
page: 1 (1) > 5

Disclaimer: All product offers displayed here belong to Amazon.com. Please click to visit their site before making your final decision.