|
LG 50PS6000
Alan White wrote:
On Sat, 09 Jan 2010 10:50:18 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: To anyone who might think that procedure is unnecessarily fiddly: it isn't. It gives good results. ... which is why I've been using it for forty years :-) I visited my daughter this morning and found myself sitting five feet from a 42" over-saturated, too bright, too contrasty Sony Bravia. When I volunteered to fix the picture she refused my kind offer on the grounds that there was nothing wrong with it. Sometimes I despair... I blame the parents. ;-) -- Adrian |
LG 50PS6000
On Sat, 09 Jan 2010 21:26:58 +0000, Adrian wrote:
I blame the parents. ;-) LOL! -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. Twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, overlooking Lochs Long and Goil in Argyll, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.gt-britain.co.uk/weather |
LG 50PS6000
On Sat, 09 Jan 2010 18:21:58 +0000, Alan White
wrote: On Sat, 09 Jan 2010 10:50:18 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: To anyone who might think that procedure is unnecessarily fiddly: it isn't. It gives good results. ... which is why I've been using it for forty years :-) I visited my daughter this morning and found myself sitting five feet from a 42" over-saturated, too bright, too contrasty Sony Bravia. When I volunteered to fix the picture she refused my kind offer on the grounds that there was nothing wrong with it. Sometimes I despair... I was a TV engineer in the late 1960's when colour sets first arrived. I used the brightness, contrast, colour set method. Most customers didn't like the results. Everything had to be over the top. I even told some customers that the tubes would not last long with the colours they wanted. Steve -- Neural Planner Software Ltd www.NPSL1.com Neural network applications, help and support. |
LG 50PS6000
In article ,
Stephen Wolstenholme wrote: I was a TV engineer in the late 1960's when colour sets first arrived. I used the brightness, contrast, colour set method. Most customers didn't like the results. Everything had to be over the top. I and it wasn't just the customers. We had a US producer using on of the Lime Grove studios - everything had to be fully saturated. "They've paid for color, so we give them COLOR" was his motto. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 |
LG 50PS6000
"charles" wrote in message ... In article , Stephen Wolstenholme wrote: I was a TV engineer in the late 1960's when colour sets first arrived. I used the brightness, contrast, colour set method. Most customers didn't like the results. Everything had to be over the top. I and it wasn't just the customers. We had a US producer using on of the Lime Grove studios - everything had to be fully saturated. "They've paid for color, so we give them COLOR" was his motto. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 Didn't the ITV companies have a moratorium on B&W feature films for some time after colour was introduced? -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
LG 50PS6000
In article ,
Graham. wrote: "charles" wrote in message ... In article , Stephen Wolstenholme wrote: I was a TV engineer in the late 1960's when colour sets first arrived. I used the brightness, contrast, colour set method. Most customers didn't like the results. Everything had to be over the top. I and it wasn't just the customers. We had a US producer using on of the Lime Grove studios - everything had to be fully saturated. "They've paid for color, so we give them COLOR" was his motto. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 Didn't the ITV companies have a moratorium on B&W feature films for some time after colour was introduced? I don't think so. I remeber a dealer complining that on Saturday mornings all 3 channels were in B&W most weeks. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 |
LG 50PS6000
Jack Rabbitt wrote:
Hi All, My LG 50PS6000 plasma TV arrived today. To be honest im not totally sure im pleased with it!? The picture looks a bit fuzzy unless you are sitting fair way back, is this normal? It also doesnt seem to be able to handle `patterns` very well, i.e if you are watching something and they have wallpaper in the background, it kinda pixleates over it. Im also not sure if the screen seems to flicker a bit here and there, sometimes you can see the screen brightness fade a little, and i have the energy saver this off. I have tried playing with the settings and cant seem to make it much better, just so i can try, what is a good setting for the brightness, colour and contrast? Seeing as the tv is supposed to have 600hz etc i did expect a much sharper and clearer picture. Is it me, or the TV? Thanks I bought 1 19-inch LG Freeview TV for our kitchen last week in the Currys sale. The software seems quite clever but the picture still looks slightly soft, even after tweaking the settings. I couldn't get things any better on the Currys shop model either. Whilst in the store I also took a look at some of the bigger LG sets - same problem to me. Perhaps they look better on HD stuff, but based on what I've seen I don't think that I'll be buying any more LG kit, unless the picture situation (as I see it) improves. Clem |
LG 50PS6000
At standard resolution this equates to pixels over 1mm square - of course it
will look fuzzy close up! This size of screen needs to be viewed from at least 5m. "Jack Rabbitt" wrote in message ... Hi All, My LG 50PS6000 plasma TV arrived today. To be honest im not totally sure im pleased with it!? The picture looks a bit fuzzy unless you are sitting fair way back, is this normal? It also doesnt seem to be able to handle `patterns` very well, i.e if you are watching something and they have wallpaper in the background, it kinda pixleates over it. Im also not sure if the screen seems to flicker a bit here and there, sometimes you can see the screen brightness fade a little, and i have the energy saver this off. I have tried playing with the settings and cant seem to make it much better, just so i can try, what is a good setting for the brightness, colour and contrast? Seeing as the tv is supposed to have 600hz etc i did expect a much sharper and clearer picture. Is it me, or the TV? Thanks |
LG 50PS6000
"charles" wrote in message ... In article , Graham. wrote: "charles" wrote in message ... In article , Stephen Wolstenholme wrote: I was a TV engineer in the late 1960's when colour sets first arrived. I used the brightness, contrast, colour set method. Most customers didn't like the results. Everything had to be over the top. I and it wasn't just the customers. We had a US producer using on of the Lime Grove studios - everything had to be fully saturated. "They've paid for color, so we give them COLOR" was his motto. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 Didn't the ITV companies have a moratorium on B&W feature films for some time after colour was introduced? I don't think so. I remeber a dealer complining that on Saturday mornings all 3 channels were in B&W most weeks. Could it have been something Granada did then? I have a strong memory of something of this sort. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
LG 50PS6000
I bought 1 19-inch LG Freeview TV for our kitchen last week in the Currys sale. The software seems quite clever but the picture still looks slightly soft, even after tweaking the settings. I couldn't get things any better on the Currys shop model either. Whilst in the store I also took a look at some of the bigger LG sets - same problem to me. Perhaps they look better on HD stuff, but based on what I've seen I don't think that I'll be buying any more LG kit, unless the picture situation (as I see it) improves. The recent 32" LGs which I have come across when installing satellite etc have shown apalling lack of definition with non-HD material to the extent that totally non-technical customers have commented on the lack of quality. You could say its their own fault for not looking at the quality properly before buying but also the shops are seriously at fault for only showing programmes from a HD source. This gives no indication about how a set deals with poor SD material and this is the area which seems to be most variable from set to set. Buyers beware, SD quality is what you should look most closely at as that is generally what you are likely to be watching most of the time. Most sets can make a reasonable job of HD. Linked to this discussion, remember that most new models from most manufacturers have seperate settings for all of the picture perameters for each of the AV inputs and for Freeview and for Analogue. So settings which you make when you are watching Freeview, for example, will not affect those for other inputs. This makes installation very long-winded. It also causes many people to ask why the picture from Sky is totally different to that from Freeview etc etc. |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:31 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com