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useless said:@swordfish1 - it looks slightly streched but not to a level of discomfort, but i think i also got used to it by now.
@Dolby - most newer LCD & Plasma screens come with builtin features to prevent burnin, plus the LCD screens now have a MTBF of 60,000 hours based on 8 hours per day usage.
new plasmas got MTBF of 60,000 as well, the Sony one that I want for exampleuseless said:@Dolby - most newer LCD & Plasma screens come with builtin features to prevent burnin, plus the LCD screens now have a MTBF of 60,000 hours based on 8 hours per day usage.
Picture-wise plasma is the way to go, durability wise (long life span) LCD is the way to go. LCD doesn't suffer from burn in at all. On other hand black sucks if you watch it in a very dark environment, which is what you will probably doDolby said:The burn in i swhy I don't want a plasma ... but I really, really do! But the burnn in .. argh! I'm not sure what I want.
Maybe an LCD? But they're not large either *sigh*
yes but don't you get a contrast degradation when viewing LCD at such angles? while with plasma you don't?useless said:i might start a debate but CRT still has the best black and grey in the market, the wide angle vision of newer LCD & Plasma panels is around 170 degrees so that defect of theirs is somewhat diluted now.
Ok - burn in?swordfish1 said:so how is the streched TV coming? is it watchable? And what are you doing to avoid burn in?
swordfish1 said:CRT is good but doesn't go biger than about 33" and it weights about 100 kilos at those sizesand I can't hang it on the wall ...
don't you know that plasma suffer from burn in? that is the main drawback of plasma! Apparently the burn in is more severe than with old CRTs. Some american channels have even changed their logos to gray to reduce the burn in from imposing logos all the time.bwana v.7 said:Ok - burn in?Is that something similar to the burn in you used to get with old crt monitors where a static image would leave an imprint?
Are plasma screens particularly vulnerable to this, even with a moving image? How - besides switching off the tv - can you prevent it?
I rotate through the various screen resize modes depending on what I'm watching. 42" is still plenty big enough to mean 1:1 is still going to be bigger and better then its predecessor.
werner said:36 and 38 inch crt's have been made in the past...but weight as much as a few elephants.
useless said:i think the best use of a 16:9 tv in SA from TV will come in 2010 when HD is finally introduced prior to the world cup, till then the best use of 16:9 is for movies and consoles.![]()
useless said:@swordfish1 - it looks slightly streched but not to a level of discomfort, but i think i also got used to it by now.
@Dolby - most newer LCD & Plasma screens come with builtin features to prevent burnin, plus the LCD screens now have a MTBF of 60,000 hours based on 8 hours per day usage.
useless said:yeah, but were they widescreen units?![]()
useless said:there seems to be a limitation to make over 32" CRT's in widescreen format... cant recall what it is...