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Senior Member |
The VISUAL part of AV
Simple question. What is the best visual system to buy. I know!!, "what do I mean by 'Best' ?" Well, I'm not going to spend £20k+ because a) I don't have £20k + to blow; and b) in a fast-changing market-place, this year's chick is soon going to be last year's hag. Do I go for a CRT TV; or a plasma; or an LCD; or a projector (DLP v LCD)...or? I suppose that I really want a 150" TV set for under £2.5k, then I could watch high-speed action-movies with incredible detail, enjoying the "big-screen" experience in daylight/tungsten-light convenience. So, to be a bit more realistic, what do you suggest in the meantime? Cheers Don |
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Senior Member |
I saw a Sanyo Z2 projector in a real home and thought 'cool' on both broadcast and DVD. So something a bit better than that would do. And would be many times better than a plasma. The effect of a 6 or 8 foot image is striking.
IMO of course. I'm toying with ideas. But a Sanyo PLV-Z3 is about £1300 with a bundled 6 foot screen, inc vat. So not that implausible. Paul |
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Trade Member |
The projector is the only way to get the real cinema experience BUT, you need to answer a few questions:
Will you have a dedicated room? If not, can you darken your room? Do you have a family/kids, squating friends? Are you planning to integrate your AV and music systems? Are you a sports/action movies fan? If you have a dedicated room, no questions: front projector; If you can't dedicate the living room when watching a movie forget the projector, i mean, darken the room, set-up the sofa for best placement... If you like sports, fast action movies, forget the LCD for a few years. If you want a big (>40") forget the CRT. If you have kids, forget the AV/music integration , they will want to watch a movie just when you want to listen to music, and they will always win. In fact the choice is not a technological one, you have to analyse your (family) habits and to know what you want to do with the system. You must keep in mind, the major difference between an AV system and a music one: music is generally an egoistic pleasure, AV is a family thing. Emmanuel Euphonie All opinions are my own, and reflect those of the organisation i work for, even if not stipulated. |
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Member |
The Panasonic PT-AE700 is the only projector to consider... far superior to anything in its class.
http://catalog2.panasonic.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ModelDetail?displayTab=O&storeId=11201&catalogId=13051&itemId=72987&catGroupId=21360&modelNo=PT-AE700U&surfModel=PT-AE700U |
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Member |
Hi Don
Your question is one that I'm also thinking about. I've just about decided to go with the av2 n-subs route integration into my naim system but like you am undecided about the visual side. (At the moment we have a 28 inch widescreen only). Fortunately I do not have children to worry about so a contest between AV and music does not occur. I have also been thinking along the lines of a projector - a question though to help me ; Can you view transmitted television pictures via a projector? In other words can I get rid of the television altogether? Peter |
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Member |
If you own/buy a Sky box/or digibox/freeview etc then you can use that as the TV tuner and get rid of the TV. If not you can use a video as a tuner for analogue TV pictures. Some people for pure convenience and because they do not want to watch Eastenders in the dark on a projector have a traditional TV or plasma for day-to-day use and a projector for watching films or the big match.
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Member |
Simon
I should have realised that I needed a tuner. Can you plug an analogue output from a tuner into a projector? Do projectors have multiple analogue/digital inputs to cater for different sources? (I know nothing about them as you can tell). I would get rid of the TV in the lounge if I went down this route - we have TV's in almost every other room anyway. Cheers Peter |
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Member |
even the biggest tvs, whatever type, look tiny and inconsequential once you sampled a projector.
the only downside is the limited lifespan of the bulb. |
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Trade Member |
Peter
Yes you can plug the analogue output of a tuner into a projector. Projectors usually have composite, S-video and component inputs, so you'd have to make a choice of which input to use for DVD and which to use for TV tuner, VCR etc. A few projectors also have digital inputs, usually in the form of DVI input. Regards, Frank. All opinions are my own and do not reflect the opinion of any organisations I work for, except where this is stated explicitly. |
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Member |
Thanks for info Frank. I'm going to get the audio side of HT sorted first then get on to the visual as finances allow. Also the technology seems to be moving very quickly so another reason for not wanting to dive in too soon.
Cheers Peter |
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Trade Member |
You're welcome. Quite correct on the pace of change. There are DLP televisions, new generation LCDs, plasma soldiers on and the promise of LEP (Light Emitting Polymer) remains on the horizon.
I think if you really want the big screen cinema effect, then you have to consider a projector for that. There's just no beating a 6 or 7 foot screen for the sense of event. The downside is that you don't always want to watch programs on such a big screen, and of course, there's the question of ambient lighting. So a lot of people elect to buy themselves a decent 28" or 32" telly and a cheaper projector to bring out when they really want to watch a movie. Regards, Frank. All opinions are my own and do not reflect the opinion of any organisations I work for, except where this is stated explicitly. |
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Senior Member |
Any recommended makes/models for plasma screens ?
I'm looking at replacing a 32" widescreen TV with a 37 or 42" plasma display. I already have a projector in a dedicated room and the plasma will just be used for day-to-day TV viewing and the occasional DVD. It doesn't seem possible to get a reliable shop demo in this area but from what I've seen so far I've been very impressed with the new Sony Wega range and a Fujitsu 42", both with 1024x1024 res ALIS screens. Both these options seem a little expensive for what I need and I was thinking of going down the route of a bare Panasonic 852x480 display panel (no tuner or media box). Unfortunately the Panasonics I've seen have not looked particularly great in a shop environment. I know they have a very good reputation and so may have to buy 'on-faith'. Allan |
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Senior Member |
quote: I have my Sky Digibox plugged into my projector S-Video input and my DVD player plugged into the componant input, so I can choose the source that I watch. Ditching the CRT TV probably isn't a good idea for several reasons: 1; If you can't dim the room - particularly during summer months, the projected picture will be relatively poor. (subject to what projector you have etc) 2; If you want to just switch on for a few minutes, for example, to watch a 10 minute news program or to check on-screen settings/program schedule on your Sky box/VCR/DVD-R, it takes a few minutes before the picture is bright and clear and also doing this will seriously affect the bulb life of your projector. I never switch mine on for less than half an hour or more and if I'm going to watch a film, then eat a quick meal, then go back to watch TV, I leave the projector on - far better in the long run rather than switching it on and off frequently. New bulbs can cost around £300.00 so it's not something you want to do very often. Incidentally, I actually hook my Sky Digibox to the projector through my VCR so I can also watch VHS should I need to (quality is nowhere near DVD) Computers are supposed to work on 1's and 0's - in other words "Yes" or "No" - why does mine frequently say "Maybe"?...... |
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Senior Member |
Allan
Here's a couple of shots from my Panasonic 42" Plasma, which incidentally is 2 & 1/2 years old now and shows no signs of failing or fading away. 1. 6 o'clock news on BBC 1...Composite Video signal 2. DVD input.....COMPONENT video signal NOTE the "banding" is not visible to the naked eye, it is an effect of the camera shutter speed vs the progressive scan rate. anyway gives you an idea what to expect regards GEOFF "Just trying to make a NAIM for myself" |
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Senior Member |
150" TV.....
Alex, this was hypothetical. The general idea was to roll into one item the concept of a large screen a brilliant picture without the need to turn the lights down detail no blurring during rapid movement ISTM that an inevitable compromise is required in performance, regardless of price. I suppose I am trying to minimse the compromise. A £2250 DLP projector + £750 manual screen might deliver the "big-screen" movie and music dvd with the darkened cinema atmosphere (but are they good enough/bright enough) PLUS A £1000 CRT 32" TV would deliver tv and "casual" and "convenient" dvd movies and music or is it better to spend £4000 on a 42"plasma and turn the lights down for the "cinematic" effect Cheers Don |
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Senior Member |
Don,
42" plasmas don't cost that much these days. The latest generation standard defintion Panasonic is under £2K and the high definition version is about £2.6K Allan |
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Senior Member |
I thnk Plasma does a good job and can be had as Allan says for around £2K in a qualitythat gives a superb picture.
LCD is potentially even better but gets very exoensive above about 24" right now. A couple of years will see the prices tumble, like they did with plasma Projectors are all about image size and that's where they win over Plasma and LCD at the same sort of price outlay. If you want to watch both TV and film through one device then in the end it becomes a domestic decision. Do you want a 150" image badly enough to have a screen hanging in the living room to watch the '6 o'clock news?. If you can afford a secondary device to view TV large size, then the projector route is probably best for Home Cinema, no contest. As a compromise which gets you a quality larger scale picture than TV and can still involve you in a movie quite successfully Plasma or LCD is a solution which is wall mountable etc. You can pay up for a screen size as big as 72" now, but that is a god awfull lot of money. I guess the size decision sits more in the 42" to 60" range right now and of course how far away you plan to sit. If you can afford LCD it beats plasma but at a cost. regards GEOFF "Just trying to make a NAIM for myself" |
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OK. Let'S see. You could go for a good LCd projector (Sanyo Z3 or Pana 700) right now which would cost you 1500-1900 EUROS(!). A screen, well can either be self made for less than 100 Euros (including professional textiles and a frame) or bought if price matters at eBay for under 200 Euros (easily!). 350 Euros for an automatic motorised screen (size between 100cm and 300cm choosable without extra costs!). Although a screen on a frame would be best and by far cheapest.
A good Plasma would set you back 2500 Euros (e.g. a Philips 106cm diagonal screen costs 2499 Euros at the moment in Germany at "Saturn"). I bet you could get all of that in England too. So for all of it together you would be looking at approx. 4-5k Euros. Which is significantly less in Pounds Sterling You could also consider LCD if you would prefer it a bit cheaper but to be honest, I haven't compared the quality to a Plasma TV myself. You would have to take a look. Maybe even a cheaper Plasma would do...depends on you. @Geoff P: Are you sure you don't mean it the other way around? LCd is cheaper by far. A 76cm LCD costs about 1200-1500 Euros and a Plasma costs about 2000-2500 Euros. Apparently LCDs are not quite as good as Plasmas, but as I said, I haven't compared. Beware though, Plasmas can have problems with channel logos burning in. In Germany, except for ads, the logos are permanently in one corner, which can damage the Plasma (well, not damage, but leave a burned in logo which might get annoying sooner or later). Oh, and about DLP or LCD. You MUST try for yourself. DLP is not necessarily better. It depends on what your eyes react to most. When demoing, definitly use something with deep blacks and some black and white movie. If possible try something with fog and something that will show the scalers capabilities (like "Gladiator", the scene when the camera flies over the city and you see lots of tiny people and you see lots of roofs and steps...I can look up the time code if you want to). LCD has the huge advantage of being "less loud" at about 25dB. DLPs are significantly louder, depending on you liking, this might be worth considering. I find even LCDs very disturbing and DLPs are killers. I would need a HushBox for both. |
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Senior Member |
quote: Alex I did say that LCD starts to "get very expensive above about 24"". By that I meant at say 36"or even worse at 42". The smaller screen sizes are much less expensive because they have volume production geared up to mkae these and that's the most popular size. It sis almost impossible to get an LCD equivalent of a 42" plasma and they cost a lot more at that size than plasma. I don't think they make LCD's as big as 60" at the moment so at that size plasma is the only option. BTW TV's also suffer from teh burned in logo image aswell. That is a "bummer" that the TV stations ought to do something about. regards GEOFF "Just trying to make a NAIM for myself" |
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Well, sorry, yes I got the price thing wrong. My mistake. You were talking of the bigger screens and are right.
I have never seen the burn in problem on an ordinary TV. BTW, whats a "RöhrenTV" in english? What's the "ordinary" TV called? Well, my test I just did, which of course was under poor retailer conditions as they usually are, was really an eye opener. I really hope they perform much better at home, unfortunatly I have never seen one really perform brilliantly. Not even when I saw them at Hifi-Dealers using them with their surround systems, although my Naim dealer has a Marantz which looked far better than those today, although still nowhere near the ordinary TV. I must say though, that my clear winner was the good old 4:3 TV, best picture, best colours, best sharpness. The 16:9 ones were not as good either. The 4:3 (even the ones for only 399€) won it all. Loewe was the best I saw today, but more expensive of course. I think 899€. Nevertheless I must say, the best quality solution seems to me to be 4:3 TV for everyday use (even when watching 16:9 software) and a pj for movies. It's just a shame those old school TVs are so da*n ugly and deep I would have liked a flat screen. As you can see on the picture, I just put my center underneath the TV (well, the TV is not on the picture) but clearly, a flatscreen would look gorgeous compared to my old one: |
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Senior Member |
Still undecided....[B]
I popped into a couple of shops and had a quick look at a number of DLP projectors, and also looked at 42" plasmas in John Lewis. [B]The plasmasgenerally looked very good. Nice, bright, colourful pictures, no picture drag on fast action rugby. The better images (more detail, better skin tones and colours) came from Panasonic (TH42PE30B) and Pioneer (PDP-435XDE). Sony were also good. I wasn't so impressed with Hitachi, JVC, LG nor a few others. However, it took a little while to see through the initial "wow" and recognise the differences in some of the pictures (although the difference between say Panasonic and LG were immediate and obvious) But the screen size seemed to shrink to "normal" after a very short time. OK going back to a 32" tv soon revealed how small 32" looked and how decent 42" looked, but I was left thinking "nice picture, but will it look big enough next week?" At the Heathrow show I watched a DreamVision (Dreamweaver 2) at £4.5k and it looked superb. Brian Rivers reconned it was as good as his £20k CRT projector and in many respects I recon he was right. A few weeks ago I watched a Sharpe (XVZ 200?) (£2500 + £600 screen) at Grahams and was very impressed. The quality was dependant on the source (Arcam v Meridian) but overall I felt I could live with this quality of image. And it was a good 7 or 8 ft across, bright, with good colours, sharp and detailed. Best value for money of the ones I've seen so far. Last week I watched a Dreamvision (model unknown) previously priced at £3k but now ex-demo at £1700. Picture quality was similar to the Screenpaly 4805 below, and it wouldn't make me put my cash on the table. Today I watched a Screenplay 4805 at £1300 and felt it was fine, but there wasn't any "wow" factor. I would be reluctant to part with the dosh. It seemed to lack precise focus or definition, although it wasn't at all blurred, the colours seemed to be a little thin, almost as if you could see through them to the screen. I felt I was always identifying faults in the picture quality. Then we watched a Sim Domino 30H (£6k) via an HDMI lead fed by a Denon 3910. Again the high price produced a high quality picture. Not "stunningly" better than the 4805 at first, but as the movie proceeded I became conscious that it was definitely better. I was no longer seeing faults, I was being pleasantly surprised. More focused, more detailed, more "thickness" to the colours, better depth in the picture, more colourful and more absorbing to watch. If this sort of picture could be had for £2,500, I could be parted from my money. The salesman reconned that the Sim Donino 20H at £4k was just as good visually.... Having now scanned the market, so to speak, it looks like I shall have to revisit Grahams to properly audition the Sharpe at £2.5k and see if it really does impress as well as the Dreamweaver and Sim 30H. If it does, I will part with my money. If it doesn't, then it looks like I'm going to have to save another £2-£3k....by which time either the quality of projectors will have improved at £2.5k, or the price at £5k will have dropped (hopefully). Either way, Home Theatre looks like it could be on the cards. Your guidance, as always, most welcome Cheers Don |
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Member |
Hi Don,
The TH42PE30B (Viera) you mention is the consumer Panasonic unit of the old TH42PW6 I have. You can tell it's the consumer one as it has speakers and a TV tuner (a digital one). It looks fancy, but is just a Generation 6 Panasonic in a nice surround. Problem is because it's a consumer focused unit it does not take expansion boards and as such cannot take a DVI or HDMI card. On the professional units, Panasonic have just brought out the generation 7 units TH42PW7, these are bound to be good although I have not had chance to see one or read a review. It will take a DVI/HDMI board and is meant to accept some quite exotic upgrade boards. On the flip side the old Gen 6 TH42PW6 (Can accept a component & DVI board) is available (in black) for £1399 at your favourite HiFi doscount store (Read What HiFi Dec Page 160!! |
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Don said:
<But the screen size seemed to shrink to "normal" after a very <short time. OK going back to a 32" tv soon revealed how small <32" looked and how decent 42" looked, but I was left <thinking "nice picture, but will it look big enough next week?" Well, I'm with you here. At home I quickly calculated screen widht and height (which to me is the important size and not the diagonal as you can't imagine to well how it would look) and figured, a 76cm diagonal should be enough. But boy I was wrong. In the shop, I must say a 106cm Plasma/LCD would be minimum requirement if also wanting to use it for 4:3 TV. In Germany, a lot of programs are still 4:3. I know that on digital satellite in the UK, most programs are actually 16:9, but not over here. And I really do not like the stretched or zoomed pictures some set their 16:9 screens to, just to fill it with 4:3 signals. I'm coming over to Stevenage and London the second week of December and might pop into some elctronics stores and have a look over in the UK. Maybe your current makes em glow better May I ask how much your budget is right now for your home theater? Because you definitly do not need to spend 2.5k on a projector to get a good 2m wide picture. So it would still be worth considering maybe. But I guess, that depends on how often you would actually use it. |
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Senior Member |
Question
May I ask how much your budget is right now for your home theater? Because you definitly do not need to spend 2.5k on a projector to get a good 2m wide picture. Answer A £2250 DLP projector + £750 manual screen might deliver the "big-screen" movie and music dvd with the darkened cinema atmosphere (but are they good enough/bright enough) PLUS A £1000 CRT 32" TV would deliver tv and "casual" and "convenient" dvd movies and music or is it better to spend £4000 on a 42"plasma and turn the lights down for the "cinematic" effect Having now scanned the market, so to speak, it looks like I shall have to revisit Grahams to properly audition the Sharpe at £2.5k and see if it really does impress as well as the Dreamweaver and Sim 30H. If it does, I will part with my money. If it doesn't, then it looks like I'm going to have to save another £2-£3k.... I'm also allowing £750 for a REL sub and £1250 for a Naim 175 for the sides and centre (I already have a spare 250 for the rears) Cheers Don |
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Ah. OK. I thought those were just maximas you were trying to avoid. So you are actually planning on spending 4k and not trying to find a maybe cheaper solution. Well, we all are kind of, but you know what I mean.
Question: A £2250 DLP projector + £750 manual screen might deliver the "big-screen" movie and music dvd with the darkened cinema atmosphere (but are they good enough/bright enough) PLUS A £1000 CRT 32" TV would deliver tv and "casual" and "convenient" dvd movies and music Answer: Well, a projector would definitly give you the best results for movies. If DLP or LCD is up to you. LCD is by far cheaper, but both have their specific problems and you will have to compare them properly as far as Vertial Banding, Shading, RBE, etc. are concerned. What kind of TV, I can't say. I quite like the ordinary TV for everyday use. Cheap and very good picture and more than enough if you also have a pj. Only thing speaking against it in my eyes is the look. No 16:9 and no 100Hz, no Plasma or LCD (too expensive for me personally). |
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Senior Member |
quote:i would rate high a conventional good tvset. but it has n o t the size of a beamer piicture. size is very essential for "cinema feeling". Plasma is worse than television and smaller than beamer pictures. i would rate on first place beamer picture on a qulity screen in a darkened room. My personal choice the reasons oray screen is very "thick" and therefore i could fix it easely and without a frame on the wall with an carpet tape.(and without any vissible waves) pioneer player (350) has a good picture,rgb output,and plays inthe codefree version any dvd without reading problems. so the things together cost nearby 2000 euros. enough budget left for a cheap "information"tv set. only problem.beamers work only in rooms without daylights.(for me no problem). best plasma tv:to my eyes definitly the new pioneer 43 inchs and the new pioner 50 inches. (435 and 504). b and o has also good but not affordable plasmas. loewe is nice designed an "easy to use" but: picture is not as good as pioneer and lowe plasmas hqave very often technical faults and problems. and beware of those cheap and non hdtv capable "no name" plasmas.(often bad picture). O.J. |
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