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#1
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I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for
them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. The reason they're upgrading is they hate the BIIIG hutch the TV is in. If you view the video below you'll see why. Its in the way. http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=3y7gz2s The wall I think they want it on is the one between those two lamps. The TV right now is on the left near the brick wall. The house is a rancher so its all on one level with a basement, so we can access the area under the tile floor somewhat easily, in most areas. So what wold be the best way to go about this? We're looking for a 26 inch TV and the best way to go about hooking it up, without the room looking like a computer center with cables all over the place. |
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#2
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"Edward" wrote in message oups.com... I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. The reason they're upgrading is they hate the BIIIG hutch the TV is in. If you view the video below you'll see why. Its in the way. http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=3y7gz2s The wall I think they want it on is the one between those two lamps. The TV right now is on the left near the brick wall. The house is a rancher so its all on one level with a basement, so we can access the area under the tile floor somewhat easily, in most areas. So what wold be the best way to go about this? We're looking for a 26 inch TV and the best way to go about hooking it up, without the room looking like a computer center with cables all over the place. Rather than cut up a wall, you might want to check out furniture designed specifically for table-top placement flat screens. The demand is for this type of furniture is creating excellent choices. These pieces are very attractive and come in depths as narrow as 16" - your TV sits on top using its own stand, your VCR, satellite receiver, DVR, etc is placed beside or below in glass doors. The reason I would hesitate cutting up a wall is that it is permanent, and also you would need in-wall plumbing with enough space to run all the wires (and ends) through and also would want to option to add different cables later. They may decide to upgrade to a DVR later on and this would require more component or HDMI cable. I might add that they may want to rethink the choice of a 26" widescreen for that room and maybe consider something larger. Even though they are getting HD from cable, most of their programming will be in standard definition and that will be received in 4:3 ratio which means that on their 26" screen, it will actually be a 20" diag picture with black bars on the side. The TV (and maybe cable box) will have stretch and zoom options but they do have their drawbacks. The stretch feature will spread the existing picture out but everything will appear fatter - no good (for me anyway). Zoom blows up the whole picture so the entire width of the screen is used, but it normally cuts off the top and bottom on the picture - this is OK unless you want to read the ticker at the bottom of sports and news stations. Also - there is some degrading of picture quality when zooming. LCD is a bit worse handling SD signal than plasma. |
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#3
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JimK wrote:
On 4 Mar 2007 09:38:54 -0800, "Edward" wrote: I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. The reason they're upgrading is they hate the BIIIG hutch the TV is in. If you view the video below you'll see why. Its in the way. http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=3y7gz2s The wall I think they want it on is the one between those two lamps. The TV right now is on the left near the brick wall. The house is a rancher so its all on one level with a basement, so we can access the area under the tile floor somewhat easily, in most areas. So what wold be the best way to go about this? We're looking for a 26 inch TV and the best way to go about hooking it up, without the room looking like a computer center with cables all over the place. 26 inch is kind of small for HD (unless your going view from 4 feet away). TV size (in inches) divide by 7 equals viewing distance (feet) http://www.myhometheater.homestead.c...alculator.html That ratio exists only to sell large TV sets. People were happy with 21 inch diagonal picture tubes for many years. Using that calculation suggests that viewers of 21 inch diagonal sets should have been watching from 3 feet away. Three feet is a good viewing distance for my 9 inch Sony Trinitron. |
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#4
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On Mar 4, 4:12 pm, jack ak wrote:
JimK wrote: On 4 Mar 2007 09:38:54 -0800, "Edward" wrote: I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. The reason they're upgrading is they hate the BIIIG hutch the TV is in. If you view the video below you'll see why. Its in the way. http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=3y7gz2s The wall I think they want it on is the one between those two lamps. The TV right now is on the left near the brick wall. The house is a rancher so its all on one level with a basement, so we can access the area under the tile floor somewhat easily, in most areas. So what wold be the best way to go about this? We're looking for a 26 inch TV and the best way to go about hooking it up, without the room looking like a computer center with cables all over the place. 26 inch is kind of small for HD (unless your going view from 4 feet away). TV size (in inches) divide by 7 equals viewing distance (feet) http://www.myhometheater.homestead.c...alculator.html That ratio exists only to sell large TV sets. People were happy with 21 inch diagonal picture tubes for many years. People were happy with 8 track tapes, rotary telephones and the horse and carriage for many years as well. Using that calculation suggests that viewers of 21 inch diagonal sets should have been watching from 3 feet away. How close do you sit to your 17 or 19" computer monitor? I rarely watch a video on my computer, but my eyes are 20" away from my 19" monitor. It's very comfortable. Older 21" sets looked like crap from close range because the signal and the technology was crap, compared to 1080i or 720p. That's the whole point of HD, you can blow the pic up 5 fold and still have something that exceeds the older 21" picture. |
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#5
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In article jack ak writes:
JimK wrote: 26 inch is kind of small for HD (unless your going view from 4 feet away). TV size (in inches) divide by 7 equals viewing distance (feet) http://www.myhometheater.homestead.c...alculator.html That ratio exists only to sell large TV sets. People were happy with 21 inch diagonal picture tubes for many years. Using that calculation suggests that viewers of 21 inch diagonal sets should have been watching from 3 feet away. No, because your 21 inch set was running rather seriously lower resolution. The calculation is based on the distance between pixels on the screen, and the number of pixels on a HD screen. If you have a lower-res screen, you need to be farther away. It also is based on a screen shape of 16:9 for a 4:3 size, you need to adjust so multiply by 1.225 to correct for that. The resolution of a SD screen is about 2.25 less per inch, so you need to be 3 * 2.25 * 1.225 = 8.27 feet Three feet is a good viewing distance for my 9 inch Sony Trinitron. By the same formula, 3.54 feet would be recommended. Alan |
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#6
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On Mar 4, 1:51 pm, "Stevie" wrote:
"Edward" wrote in message oups.com... I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. The reason they're upgrading is they hate the BIIIG hutch the TV is in. If you view the video below you'll see why. Its in the way. http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=3y7gz2s The wall I think they want it on is the one between those two lamps. The TV right now is on the left near the brick wall. The house is a rancher so its all on one level with a basement, so we can access the area under the tile floor somewhat easily, in most areas. So what wold be the best way to go about this? We're looking for a 26 inch TV and the best way to go about hooking it up, without the room looking like a computer center with cables all over the place. Rather than cut up a wall, you might want to check out furniture designed specifically for table-top placement flat screens. The demand is for this type of furniture is creating excellent choices. These pieces are very attractive and come in depths as narrow as 16" - your TV sits on top using its own stand, your VCR, satellite receiver, DVR, etc is placed beside or below in glass doors. Good point. Ok, thats the infor I need. No holes int he wall. The problem is the woman effect - no wires can be visible. When I had my first apartment there was a set of composite cables running along the wall to the PC. She tells me "No girl will take you seriously with a wire goign accross the place." I leave and come back and notice there is a new Vietnam of plantlife along that wall - for the sole putpose of hiding those wires. The plants lasted all of two weeks. The reason I would hesitate cutting up a wall is that it is permanent, and also you would need in-wall plumbing with enough space to run all the wires (and ends) through and also would want to option to add different cables later. They may decide to upgrade to a DVR later on and this would require more component or HDMI cable. I might add that they may want to rethink the choice of a 26" widescreen for that room and maybe consider something larger. Even though they are getting HD from cable, most of their programming will be in standard definition and that will be received in 4:3 ratio which means that on their 26" screen, it will actually be a 20" diag picture with black bars on the side. The TV (and maybe cable box) will have stretch and zoom options but they do have their drawbacks. The stretch feature will spread the existing picture out but everything will appear fatter - no good (for me anyway). Zoom blows up the whole picture so the entire width of the screen is used, but it normally cuts off the top and bottom on the picture - this is OK unless you want to read the ticker at the bottom of sports and news stations. Also - there is some degrading of picture quality when zooming. LCD is a bit worse handling SD signal than plasma.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'm suggesting they go with 36 inch, I forgot the screen will be wider than it is high. Another question, how many HDMI ports will there be on the back of most sets? I'm hoping at least two, one for the DVD player, one for the cable box, then a few composite and component plugs for the VCR. One unit I checked out at Best Buy.com has composite OUT - which would be nice for video capturing - youtube and the like. But that's irrelevent. |
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#7
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jack ak wrote:
That ratio exists only to sell large TV sets. Agree the sizes are ridiculously big using that formula |
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#8
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On Sun, 04 Mar 2007 13:12:09 -0800, jack ak wrote:
JimK wrote: 26 inch is kind of small for HD (unless your going view from 4 feet away). TV size (in inches) divide by 7 equals viewing distance (feet) http://www.myhometheater.homestead.c...alculator.html That ratio exists only to sell large TV sets. People were happy with 21 inch diagonal picture tubes for many years. Using that calculation suggests that viewers of 21 inch diagonal sets should have been watching from 3 feet away. Three feet is a good viewing distance for my 9 inch Sony Trinitron. A 21" 16:9 is a lot smaller than a 4:3 21" set, so you would need to closer to the 16:9 set to the image appear as large as the 4:3 set. Roughly 25% closer. And overall, there's less viewing area on a 21" 16:9 set than a 21" 4:3 set. Roughly 20% less. Also, images aren't proportional to viewing distances. IOW's, There's a large difference between 2 and 5 feet, but not so much from 5 to 8 feet. Find what you like and use it. there's is nothing other than that that matters. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
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#9
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Edward wrote:
I never thought I would see the day... it took about 20 years for them to get touch tone phones, and now I get an email saying they want a flat screen TV and HD service from Comcast. I had to read it twice and call them up to make sure they weren't joking. They're not. Now, I have some questions. Mom won't want wires hanging all over the place. I'm thinking we should have a contractor come in, install an outlet where the TV will hang and fish some various A/V wires in the wall down to the dcorner where we'll have the VCR (yes we still need it) DVD and cable box. Any reason not to have a chase made that would go up the outside of the wall from the top of the baseboard and open behind the display. Power and multiple signal cables would fit easily in a 2"x6" chase. Painted the same color as the wall a chase would essentially disappear. Matthew -- I'm a consultant. If you want an opinion I'll sell you one. Which one do you want? |
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#10
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I'm suggesting they go with 36 inch, I forgot the screen will be wider
than it is high. Another question, how many HDMI ports will there be on the back of most sets? I'm hoping at least two, one for the DVD player, one for the cable box, then a few composite and component plugs for the VCR. One unit I checked out at Best Buy.com has composite OUT - which would be nice for video capturing - youtube and the like. But that's irrelevent. Most 720p sets have at least 2 HDMI/composite inputs but it varies. You have the right idea - at least 2 HD connections (composite or HDMI) and one or two component inputs (video/audio) and also one or two coax antenna inputs. So besides all the other factors involved in picking out a TV, the number of inputs will affect your choice. Here's the big thing to consider. Plasma or LCD? Most all plasma screens are highly reflective which means that if there are windows in the viewing angle, it could make the set unwatchable. Plasma does handle standard definition (SD) signals better than LCD. Even though your parents will be getting HD, most stations will still be in SD. LCD screens are much less reflective and window reflections will not be a problem. However, LCD screens tend to produce more artifacts (imperfections) with SD with a less clear picture. So there is a trade-off with each type. I chose LCD because of all the windows on one side of my viewing area. I don't regret the LCD decision one bit. The window situation in the room should be evaluated and they can do this by putting a similar-sized mirror where the TV will be placed. Look at it from all possible viewing angles to see if a window can be seen. Also - when in the show room, have the salesman switch the TVs to standard definition so you can see the real-life differences between LCD and plasma. Stand back away from the sets too so you can get a fair look at what you will be seeing, It's tempting to make a decision based on what you see at 2' range but be realistic about viewing distances. |
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