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-   -   How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=56038)

larkim January 7th 08 05:12 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
On Jan 7, 12:44*pm, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 12:21, bugbear wrote:

Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 10:25, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 02:45, "Bill Wright" wrote:


Adjust the contrast, brightness, and colour for the most realistic effect.
Usually this will mean setting all three a long way below the manufacturer's
default.
"Flog it and buy


a CRT"


Cool. Can you point me to a 42" diagonal CRT
with geometry (linearity etc) as good as a LCD or Plasma?


There are no perfect TVs (yet?)


No but I can point you to a 32" flat screen CRT with near perfect
geometry with far superior contrast, picture quality and natural
movement compared to any LCD or Plasma i've seen using SD input.

Doc


Where? I'm interested in buying a CRT but I can't find them!!
(Genuinely)

Matt

Dr Hfuhruhurr January 7th 08 05:16 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
On 7 Jan, 16:12, larkim wrote:
On Jan 7, 12:44 pm, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:



On 7 Jan, 12:21, bugbear wrote:


Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 10:25, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 02:45, "Bill Wright" wrote:


Adjust the contrast, brightness, and colour for the most realistic effect.
Usually this will mean setting all three a long way below the manufacturer's
default.
"Flog it and buy


a CRT"


Cool. Can you point me to a 42" diagonal CRT
with geometry (linearity etc) as good as a LCD or Plasma?


There are no perfect TVs (yet?)


No but I can point you to a 32" flat screen CRT with near perfect
geometry with far superior contrast, picture quality and natural
movement compared to any LCD or Plasma i've seen using SD input.


Doc


Where? I'm interested in buying a CRT but I can't find them!!
(Genuinely)


Sadly, my living room and my 8 year old 32pw9525 Philips. :(
Can't get em no more

Doc

Dr Hfuhruhurr January 7th 08 05:20 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
On 7 Jan, 16:12, larkim wrote:
On Jan 7, 12:44 pm, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:



On 7 Jan, 12:21, bugbear wrote:


Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 10:25, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 02:45, "Bill Wright" wrote:


Adjust the contrast, brightness, and colour for the most realistic effect.
Usually this will mean setting all three a long way below the manufacturer's
default.
"Flog it and buy


a CRT"


Cool. Can you point me to a 42" diagonal CRT
with geometry (linearity etc) as good as a LCD or Plasma?


There are no perfect TVs (yet?)


No but I can point you to a 32" flat screen CRT with near perfect
geometry with far superior contrast, picture quality and natural
movement compared to any LCD or Plasma i've seen using SD input.


Doc


Where? I'm interested in buying a CRT but I can't find them!!
(Genuinely)

Matt


erm....
http://www.redstore.com/SANMON092
http://www.memory-express.co.uk/inde...d=17&id=525128
http://www.memory-express.co.uk/inde...d=17&id=639141 - HD
Ready too

Doc

PeeGee January 7th 08 05:33 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 16:12, larkim wrote:
On Jan 7, 12:44 pm, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:



On 7 Jan, 12:21, bugbear wrote:
Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 10:25, Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:
On 7 Jan, 02:45, "Bill Wright" wrote:
Adjust the contrast, brightness, and colour for the most realistic effect.
Usually this will mean setting all three a long way below the manufacturer's
default.
"Flog it and buy
a CRT"
Cool. Can you point me to a 42" diagonal CRT
with geometry (linearity etc) as good as a LCD or Plasma?
There are no perfect TVs (yet?)
No but I can point you to a 32" flat screen CRT with near perfect
geometry with far superior contrast, picture quality and natural
movement compared to any LCD or Plasma i've seen using SD input.
Doc

Where? I'm interested in buying a CRT but I can't find them!!
(Genuinely)

Matt


erm....
http://www.redstore.com/SANMON092
http://www.memory-express.co.uk/inde...d=17&id=525128
http://www.memory-express.co.uk/inde...d=17&id=639141 - HD
Ready too

Doc

The trouble there would be getting the forklift into the room to move it :-)

--
PeeGee

The reply address is a spam trap. All mail is reported as spam.
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knowledge or consent of the computer user. Software should also be able
to be removed from a computer easily."
Peter Cullen, Microsoft Chief Privacy Strategist (Computing 18 Aug 05)

CS January 7th 08 07:49 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
And the 32 inch CRTs use less power - 100W.

Roderick Stewart January 7th 08 07:59 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
In article 0e40727a-532f-493b-a911-
, Larkim wrote:
No but I can point you to a 32" flat screen CRT with near perfect
geometry with far superior contrast, picture quality and natural
movement compared to any LCD or Plasma i've seen using SD input.

Doc


Where? *I'm interested in buying a CRT but I can't find them!!
(Genuinely)


There are lots on Ebay. You'd probably have to choose one near where
you live and collect it yourself, but you may be able to get something
very good for a very low price. It seems to be a buyers' market.

I have a couple of CRT computer monitors that I'd be happy to *give*
away, but have so far found it impossible to do so. That gives an idea
of the current popularity of CRTs.

Rod.


Ben January 7th 08 08:19 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:

Since I can't see myself moving to HD for a while yet, I want
something that does the best possible with SD until it dies (and being
a 8 year old Philips screen, could be any moment now)


My Philips is 9 years old now and shows no signs of imminent death. It
has some convergence and geometry issues, and the picture is a little
soft, but that's nice as compression artefacts don't show up.

Adrian[_3_] January 7th 08 08:22 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
Ben wrote:
Dr Hfuhruhurr wrote:

Since I can't see myself moving to HD for a while yet, I want
something that does the best possible with SD until it dies (and
being a 8 year old Philips screen, could be any moment now)


My Philips is 9 years old now and shows no signs of imminent death. It
has some convergence and geometry issues, and the picture is a little
soft, but that's nice as compression artefacts don't show up.


I've got a Sony I bought second hand 8 years ago, still looks OK to me.



Usenet January 7th 08 09:04 PM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
Bill Wright wrote:
Adjust the contrast, brightness, and colour for the most realistic effect.
Usually this will mean setting all three a long way below the manufacturer's
default.

Bill


Don't over use the sharpness control. Less is better in this respect.

Glenn.

Bill Wright January 8th 08 03:55 AM

How to greatly inprove the performance of your LCD or plasma
 
Eeeee, I've caused a right debate haven't I?

Bill




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