Friday, February 21, 2014

Best LCD 1080p TV 46' or more, under $1300?




Ry


I like samsung and know a little about them, the 550 seris and 650, 750's are nice. And I like sony, but dont know much about them.
I will use this w/ blue ray movies, my ps3 games mostly. I watch very little TV, and I have sat.
I will buy off Amazon, casue some TVS are 500$ off diff. from best buy.



Answer
I suggest Samsung excellent quality picture.For you budget you can get Samsung LN46A550 46-Inch 1080p LCD HDTV.It is a good choice
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0014175E8?ie=UTF8&tag=computer0bd-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B0014175E8
but If you have enough money I recommend Samsung LN46A650 46-Inch 1080p 120Hz LCD HDTV with RED Touch of Color better one
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001413D94?ie=UTF8&tag=computer0bd-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B001413D94

40 vs. 46 Samsung LCD HDTV - same price, different specs, SD quality?




Dexter


I'm not posting the question once again, I found a completely new TV: should I get the 40", 4ms response time and 70000-100000:1 (not sure yet) contrast with Wi-Fi (and YouTube apps etc.) and direct USB video straming and 1gb hard drive TV with some new systems like ultra-crystal screen or somthing, or the older 46" 5ms response time 40000:1 TV for the same price? I'll be sitting ca. 10ft from the TV, but I will mostly play Wii and watch in SD, sometimes HD movies and sports. And I've heard the bigger the screen, the worse the SD quality. Is it true? Please help me decide! Thanks!


Answer
"The bigger the screen the worse the SD" is true up to a certain point. But if both TVs are natively 1920x1080, then SD is going to look about the same. If you had a smaller TV whose native resolution was 1280x720, or thereabouts, then the SD might look a bit better (as less up-scaling would have to be performed). But manufacturers are getting better with the up-scaling.

Ignore all those contrast ratio numbers you have. By the time you're into those numbers, you're not going to see a huge difference in sets, especially at 10ft away. Is there a difference? Sure, but it just won't be intensely noticeable when you take a realistic look at things.

I would likely lean towards the 40" option myself. That sounds like a series 7 model you're quoting. Those are sweet TV sets. But if the 46" model has a 120Hz refresh rate, then it might still be a valid choice. At that point I would have to look at all those bells and whistles that the 40" one has and see if I'd actually use any of them. If yes, then stick it out with the smaller set. If no, and the 46" is 120Hz, then it may serve you better at a 10 foot viewing distance.




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