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I see you can get low-res TV's, Hi-Def TV's, and VCR/DVD combos at the
local Big Box Marts with digital receivers built in. In fact, they no longer sell analog only TV's. 1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? 3. Assuming many of the VCR/DVD combos are cheap POS units, is it possible/practical to cannibalize the digital tuner from them? |
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#3
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#4
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On Jan 2, 7:58 pm, wrote:
I see you can get low-res TV's, Hi-Def TV's, and VCR/DVD combos at the local Big Box Marts with digital receivers built in. In fact, they no longer sell analog only TV's. 1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? 3. Assuming many of the VCR/DVD combos are cheap POS units, is it possible/practical to cannibalize the digital tuner from them? You can get digital tuners on the surplus market (ebay),. A friend has a Samsung that had HDMI, but also can drive a standard PC monitor. |
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#5
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On Jan 2, 10:58*pm, wrote:
I see you can get low-res TV's, Hi-Def TV's, and VCR/DVD combos at the local Big Box Marts with digital receivers built in. In fact, they no longer sell analog only TV's. The biggest trouble were clearance sales, where people were getting great deals on analog TVs. Seems like a ripoff now. 1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? The major thing I'm aware of is tuning. Let's say you got analog 2,4, and 7. The digital channels are different. In Detroit its 58, 45, and 41 respectively. After a digital channel search, you should be okay with using the old analog numbers 2, 4, and 7, although my TV will show analog 7, and I'll have to channel up to 7-1. Without the search, you have to input the digital channel-- but some tuners will know it's digital right away if I enter 41, while others will need a dot or dash button -/. , to enter the subchannel. That button is located where the # sign is on a telephone pad. Usually, the lowest subchannel is the HD and -2, -3, etc., up to 6 are the extra subchannels. But HD is actually found on 41-3 where I'm at, so depending on the tuner, I may have to enter that instead of 41-1. Sounds complicated, but the subchannels have almost doubled the amount of free programming that I can get, and most tuners learn how to simplify the process for you. 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? They may up the HD standard for the home theater geeks, but SD should be fine. If the future allows for more data compression, there'd just end up being more subchannels. 3. Assuming many of the VCR/DVD combos are cheap POS units, is it possible/practical to cannibalize the digital tuner from them? If they have them, why not? But I think that digital tuners have only recently come down in price, so unless you paid an extra chunk of change for the top of the line, I'm not sure if it would be equipped. That -/. button is the quickest way to check, because you know you'll need that. |
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#6
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On Jan 2, 7:58*pm, wrote:
I see you can get low-res TV's, Hi-Def TV's, and VCR/DVD combos at the local Big Box Marts with digital receivers built in. In fact, they no longer sell analog only TV's. 1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? 3. Assuming many of the VCR/DVD combos are cheap POS units, is it possible/practical to cannibalize the digital tuner from them? ------------------------- If you want to buy a full HD OTA tuner, get the Samsung. If you want a 480i only converter box bought through the government coupon program, get the Zenith as it has the best chip. Christopher |
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#7
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On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 19:58:16 -0800, muzician21 wrote:
1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? They pretty much all do the same thing. The ones I use are 7 year old design and they work fine for me. Newer tuners may work a little better under multipath but I don't have that problem. 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? ATSC will probably be here for at least 20 years. Consider NTSC is going on about 70 years old. 3. Assuming many of the VCR/DVD combos are cheap POS units, is it possible/practical to cannibalize the digital tuner from them? Not practical. They would only fit back in a same model unit. You can get PC tuners cheap. I've got 6 in my system and the last one I bought I got for $17.50 (ATSC only). cross posting removed -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org My Tivo Experience http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/tivo.htm Tivo HD/S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm AMD cpu help http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php |
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#8
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#9
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1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there
different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? When you say "digital receiver", I can't help but think of an audio component. You mean a "TV set", I assume. Most sets can display any format (720p, 1080i, 1080p). However, the less-expensive sets have a native resolution of only 720p, and convert 1080 inputs to 720p. To avoid obsolescence, your set should be able handle 1080p natively, and be able to display 24fps directly, without conversion. Sony seems to have the best LCD sets, Pioneer and Panasonic the best plasma sets. Look at Consumer Reports, the on-line reviews, and various magazine reviews. One of the magazines (I forget which) had a detailed study of whether particular sets properly supported deinterlacing, upconversion, and so forth. 2. Is there any "next big thing" on the horizon that will make them obsolete and useless or is the current digital broadcast standard going to be in place until the sun burns out? The Japanese are working on video systems with twice the horizontal and vertical resolution of the current standards. It will be many years before they come to market -- if at all. Note the relative "failure" of SACD/DVD-A and Blu-ray/HD DVD. People are generally happy with what they already have. It takes time for the public to "digest" technological advances and desire something better. The current NTSC standard has been around 60 years and -- used well -- can still produce excellent image quality. It's likely the current HD standard will be around at least 20 years, and likely longer. As for the specific flat-panel technology, there are two display technologies that might conceivably displace LCD and plasma. Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) have appeared in a few consumer products (cameras and cell phones), but don't seem to be making progress in TV. The surface electron-emission display (SED) was predicted to outperform plasma, but is currently tied up in patent-licensing squabbles, and appears (at the moment) never to get to market. If you buy a high-quality LCD or plasma set, it's unlikely its visible performance will be greatly exceeded in the near future. If you're really worried about obsolescence, buy one of the less-expensive Vizios. Though not of the highest quality, they're good, and cheap enough that you can toss them in a few years. |
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#10
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"William Sommerwerck" wrote in message
... 1. Do the digital receivers all function the same way or are there different features/functions to be aware of? Any receiver brands that are clearly better than others? When you say "digital receiver", I can't help but think of an audio component. You mean a "TV set", I assume. excellent reply snipped William, would you mind telling us which of the cross-posted groups you were reading when you replied? If not a.t.t.hdtv, perhaps there is another group for me to subscribe to. -- Tom in Bristol - (disregard dangling participle!) |
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