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LED TV
"Alan" wrote in message ... In message , tony sayer wrote But Joe public has bought it on himself by wanting any and everything for as cheap as possible and the best deal around so something has to suffer... But the companies selling at top price are no better! And if you take the top end Hi-Fi market as an example then the technical advice is likely to be complete B******t. Alan You've seen Saxondale (played by Steve Coogan) in Sevenoaks Sound & Vision, Watford. then? ;-) Steve Terry |
LED TV
Tom E wrote:
there is never a good time............sorta like computers. The only thing I would suggest is get one with FOXSAT built in for the current and future HD transmissions. I'd like to get one with built-in DVB-T2, so it isn't obsolete when the new muxes get rolled out this Autumn. (If it can't have that it may as well have no digital decoder at all because I will need an external box) AFAIK no-one is making any yet. Andy |
LED TV
Laurence Payne wrote:
On Sat, 30 May 2009 09:19:10 +0100, "Angela" wrote: We need a new TV as ours has finally died. Having looked around the picture on the new Samsung LED is certainly impressive and the thinness is just incredible. It is however new technology and does cost a bit more than an equivalent size LCD. Do you think it's early days with LED and best avoided in case it turns out to be problematic? We intend to buy from John Lewis to take advantage of their free 5 year guarantee (which has proven useful in the past), but I would be interested to hear from others as to whether you can foresee any problems and whether we should go for it? Does it really matter if it's an inch thinner? If flat-screen technology hadn't come along, you'd be happily and proudly showing off a very bulky large-screen CRT model :-) Any other reasons you prefer to pay more than for a LCD? I agree with the previous poster, it shouldn't be difficult to find a better deal than John Lewis. That guarantee certainly isn't "free". What the guarantee "Never knowingly undersold"? Which means they'll price-match in the local area? Andy |
LED TV
In article ,
Andy Champ wrote: What the guarantee "Never knowingly undersold"? Which means they'll price-match in the local area? They will - but like for like from another retailer. Not from a mail order company. -- *When you've seen one shopping centre you've seen a mall* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
LED TV
Angela wrote:
We need a new TV as ours has finally died. Having looked around the picture on the new Samsung LED is certainly impressive and the thinness is just incredible. It is however new technology and does cost a bit more than an equivalent size LCD. Do you think it's early days with LED and best avoided in case it turns out to be problematic? We intend to buy from John Lewis to take advantage of their free 5 year guarantee (which has proven useful in the past), but I would be interested to hear from others as to whether you can foresee any problems and whether we should go for it? Having recently done some research for a purchase, my impression was the the LED technology isn't yet as good as the better LCD panels, though I don't know if the difference is enough to bother any but the pickiest. "Deeper blacks" seemed to be the main benefit, but many conventional LCDs now perform very well in that area. To me, the only practical reason for choosing a thin TV at such a premium would be if you were mounting it on a wall. Then it makes perfect sense. The Samsungs come with some nice HD art pictures in the Content Library which would look very good on a thin, wall-mounted TV. Like having the National Gallery in your living room! Most people would want to watch some moving pictures, though, and most AV set-ups have (several) other boxes attached. This tends to spoil the minimalist look, though I suppose the TV would cover the large holes you'd need to punch in the wall to hide the cables. Someone else has pointed out that many users end up putting their flat TVs in a corner, with little or no gain in space. This is often necessary to increase the viewing distance needed for larger panels. |
LED TV
Laurence Payne wrote:
On Sat, 30 May 2009 12:21:33 +0100, "Dr Zoidberg" wrote: I agree with the previous poster, it shouldn't be difficult to find a better deal than John Lewis. That guarantee certainly isn't "free". It may still be a good deal when you figure in free delivery - if you need it. And the JL extended warranty is pretty comprehensive unlike some others. And you can always look for a competitor to price match against. JL have been known to play a game where they get the manufacturer to put a label on with a slightly different model number. Then they can claim no-one else stocks QUITE the same item. They also make great play of their guarantee. As no-one else sells QUITE the same package, they can wriggle out of price-matching. Yes very true,.. standard in the industry, as is paying for warranties. a little bit like banks paying for their own rating. The system relies on all MFR not producing sh1te, if they do it will be bust. Noone really does testing anymore or cares about lifetime. I'm afraid they sell into the market which thinks paying more gets you something better. That just ain't true with consumer toys these days. Yep you have no idea what you are getting, my £1500 Loewe 32" had the best picture review but my partner was no longer will to put up with the problems (darkness in one corner and audio buzzing when hot) after it was 5 years old. I could have claimed on the SOG but it offers no real protection either, I would have gotten a £100 back maybe. And likely the on-line retailer would have told me to FO, since they asked me to agree to pay for the return costs (at the time of sale) because the MFRs guarantee didn't cover my postcode. They obviously didn't think the SOG applied to them. -- Tony |
LED TV
Jim wrote:
Angela wrote: We need a new TV as ours has finally died. Having looked around the picture on the new Samsung LED is certainly impressive and the thinness is just incredible. It is however new technology and does cost a bit more than an equivalent size LCD. Do you think it's early days with LED and best avoided in case it turns out to be problematic? We intend to buy from John Lewis to take advantage of their free 5 year guarantee (which has proven useful in the past), but I would be interested to hear from others as to whether you can foresee any problems and whether we should go for it? Having recently done some research for a purchase, my impression was the the LED technology isn't yet as good as the better LCD panels, though I don't know if the difference is enough to bother any but the pickiest. "Deeper blacks" seemed to be the main benefit, but many conventional LCDs now perform very well in that area. To me, the only practical reason for choosing a thin TV at such a premium would be if you were mounting it on a wall. Then it makes perfect sense. The Samsungs come with some nice HD art pictures in the Content Library which would look very good on a thin, wall-mounted TV. Like having the National Gallery in your living room! Most people would want to watch some moving pictures, though, and most AV set-ups have (several) other boxes attached. This tends to spoil the minimalist look, though I suppose the TV would cover the large holes you'd need to punch in the wall to hide the cables. Someone else has pointed out that many users end up putting their flat TVs in a corner, with little or no gain in space. This is often necessary to increase the viewing distance needed for larger panels. Most of the picture quality is in the processing which is the same for all pixelated TVs. Scaling and deinterlacing is very difficult to do, but as processing speeds increase (for video processors) and scalers are sold in bigger volumes the picture quality will improve. A few years ago you could pay £3000 for a really good scaler, it never really caught on. The current raft of LCDs TVs are quite good, but I havn't seen the Samsung LED backlite one. I bought a 40" Sony Bravia with 33,000:1 contrast ratio, its processing is pretty good but does have problems sometimes, although alot of the time its just that broadcast problems are more prevalent now with the bigger screen that I wanted to get the benefit from Blu ray. Unfortunately SD and HD are somewhat mutually exclusive in requirements. Actually one of the reasons HD looks so good is because it doesn't need so much scaling, I can't say I really notice any difference when immersed in a movie anyway. -- Tony |
LED TV
It was explained to me the other day that the new Samsungs only
have LED illumination around the edges at present, not one per pixel. Either way I would say the picture quality is such that, for the first time since a CRT, I might just give one house room - if I could afford it! Having said that, have you seen the price of the (special) wall bracket???? I have been told pushing £500!!!!!!! -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
LED TV
Woody wrote:
It was explained to me the other day that the new Samsungs only have LED illumination around the edges at present, not one per pixel. Either way I would say the picture quality is such that, for the first time since a CRT, I might just give one house room - if I could afford it! Having said that, have you seen the price of the (special) wall bracket???? I have been told pushing £500!!!!!!! It won't be long before CPC start selling suitable brackets for it for about 25 quid. -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. www.paras.org.uk |
LED TV
In message , Woody
wrote It was explained to me the other day that the new Samsungs only have LED illumination around the edges at present, not one per pixel. Either way I would say the picture quality is such that, for the first time since a CRT, I might just give one house room - if I could afford it! Having said that, have you seen the price of the (special) wall bracket???? I have been told pushing £500!!!!!!! Is this the one with the motor drive for the tilt that you can control via the remote? Most sensible people would buy a bracket for under £20 and tilt it by hand once- and then leave it. -- Alan news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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