And if there is not specific tv’s available to those details. What Tv’s are not CCFL backlit. But are RGB back lit or HCFL? .. that i could purchase instead? I only ask this because i want true white light backlighting for true color and contrast.
Lol yeah but bigger = more money, plus more room, im a college student with limited space in my room as well. i could use a wall mount but i would like to stay around 32-40 – 46 would be max max size.

I recommend Samsung UN40C6300 40-Inch 1080p 120 Hz LED HDTV (Black).

http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fs%3Fie%3DUTF8%26x%3D17%26ref_%3Dnb%5Fsb%5Fnoss%26y%3D16%26field-keywords%3D40%2526%252334%253B%2520LED%2520TV%2520%26url%3Dnode%253D172659&tag=tv.led.lcd.plasma.hdtv-20&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=390957

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I want to buy TV (if possible LCD) for my bed room. Budget around Rs 30-35k Rs. My room size if 11-12 and it may increase as I need to buy a home too, although later only may be 5 yrs or so. is 26′ inch is ok or better to go for 32” in this budget. I am middle class salaried person. Sony Samsung LG so many other options exist in India. But donoo what to go for technology (tv/slim tv/ultra slim tv /lcd / led / plasma) brand (sony/samsung/lg etc)

You will have lots of answer, but 1 serious suggestion is that the new age TVs, that is the plasma, LCD, or LED TVs do not have a life of over 5 years.

The best resolution and continuous life for about 15 years is only given by CRT TVs.

Now a days, the CRT TVs are going out of market because of manufacturing costs and profit.

Remember the level clarity, sharpness and resolution or refresh rate and also contrast rate that you will get in a CRT TV can not be achieved by the plasma, LCD, or LED TVs at least in this century.

In CRT TVs buy a tv which has a flat screen and avoid ultra slim as they will be more costly.

You will get CRT TVs from 36cm / 14" to 74 cms / 29".

Lastly, if you think more of style and ego related to the TV than life and clarity of the TV and also that you can buy a TV every 5 years, go for a LCD / LED.

Sony is the best in this class. Go for a HDMI Bravia LCD model. But expensive as well. It comes with a 3 years warranty in India.

LG / Samsung is good and less expensive.

One good news I should give you, people who are into hard core experienced PC gaming, these days they are buying 2nd hand CRT and Projection Monitors, only because, these days very large Monitors of this kind is not any more available and also these give the best satisfaction to gamers.

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I’m looking at the LG 42PQ10 which seems too good to be true except that it’s 720p. It’s 545.00 shipped (http://www.retrevo.com/search?q=LG+42PQ10&rt=sp). The LG plasmas that I have seen have looked pretty good, but I’m new to the whole HDTV thing and am having some trouble wrapping my head around it. I’ve seen high priced LCD and plasma TVs that didn’t look as good as the one I have now despite impressive specifications. I really want an LED TV, but it seems kind of silly to buy them now since their prices will probably be going down a lot over the next couple of years. I make it a point to never buy a technology as soon as it comes out. My main fear is that I’m going to spend a bunch of money on a tv, move this 300 pound monster I’ve been using (37 inch apex flatscreen from back when they were fat) down stairs and then hook up the new one to find that the picture isn’t as good. I’m really sick of researching this.

What actually looks better
A: 120 hertz motionflow LCD
B: 600 hertz Plasma.

Please help. Thanks.

Television is a thing that you can’t buy by reading text and looking at pictures. You have really to go to the store, sit there and watch the TV turned on.. live and see its quality.

However, one thing I can update you to…

Plasma is a system that they developed that is very annoying if you don’t use it right. It will only result in a clean (out of noise and rain) image if the TV is at a certain distance from your eye which is quite big. In addition to that, it is a product with a short perspective of life being that once it is "exhausted" it can’t be fixed (because of the gas that is hold inside being that it can only work back if you change it and do a lot of modifications which will cost more than a brand new tv)

LCD is better than plasma, in quality from a closer view and life span. However it has its advantages too… related to buying cost and fixing prices and more.

The thing is… you have to know how big and how you are going to set up the TV in your place, and get to the store and see a bunch of them working to compare and decide for the best quality.

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Test UE40B6000 TV LCD LED by Samsung en vente chez EcranLounge.com

Duration : 0:7:55

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Regular TV black and white TV from the old days
Plama TV
LCD TV
Led TV
DLP TV

Seriously? Wiki/Google much?

Regular tv’s: not the black and white ones, color, crt models. Cathode Ray Tubes, has a gun in the back, shoots junk towards the front. Known for superior black colors and contrast.

Plasma: Panes of glass, tubes of gas. Superior contrast ratio, much much much higher than traditiona lcd’s, talking 2million to one and up. Newer models have the same lifespan of lcd’s 60,000 hrs to 100,000 hours. Much higher refresh rate @ 600hz, faster response time .001ms. Perfect for movie watching and regular tv watching. Not as high of a chance for image retention as they used to be, newer sets you’re looking at about 10-12ish hours before it happens, or so they say. Usually have a glass panel on the front which can give you more reflection in brighter rooms. But much better for fast action stuff.

LCD tv: I call these traditional LCD’s. You have an lcd panel with the lightsource behind it, this case they are basic CCFL Tube Lights. Low contrast, high end sets have a 100,000 to one dynamic contrast ratio. Only go up to 240hz vs plasmas 600hz. You’d be hard pressed to even see the difference from a 120hz vs a 240 hz on regular movies or tv, yet alone 240hz vs 600hz. No chance of burn in, so more recomended for heavy gaming and pc connection, since both tend to have the most static images. They lose a little contrast at the higher viewing angles. The panels without any glass front will simply absorb light.

LED: as far as consumer led tv’s they are actually LED LCD tvs. they have a LCD panel but instead of CCFL lighting they have LED lights. You get high dynamic contrast, comparable to plasmas 2 mil and up, without the draw back of the plasmas burn in. so they are well suited for superior movie watching and hooking up to your pc, or viewing photos on them without any risks. only up to 240hz as far as refresh rate, but, like i said above, you really really have to nitpick the details to see the difference from 120vs240. there are 3 types of led lighting systems. edge lit; lights are around the edge of the tv pointing inwards which makes the set super thin. downfall to that is, to me at least, you get an even washed out look on the black areas. second type is full array backlighting without local dimming (sharps). the lights are on the back of the tv dirrectly which means you get better lighting directly on the panel itself. the third is full array with local dimming, this is going to be the best out there. the lights are in the back behind the lcd panel, but the lights locally dim according to the picture. so, lets say the top right of the picture is darker, the tv will adjust that set of lights lower or turn off while leaving the rest of the lights in the tv alone to give you truer blacks and better contrast of colors. the samsung 8500 seires does this, as do the toshibas and lg’s. even though the sharp doesn’t do this, they have amazing panels that don’t leak as much light and are still sexy tv’s.

DLP: projection tv’s, i stay away from the traditional ones. they implement a light bulb, a color wheel and the mirror chip by texas instruments. the chip has tons of little tiny mirrors that switch on and off, reflecting or not reflecting light onto the screen infront. trick to these is that…well, light bulbs burn out and these arent cheap, 200 bucks and up usually. tons of moving parts. the tv themselves though are crazy cheap for the sizes you can get. newer models like mitsubishi are changing things though. instead of the lamp and a color wheel they are putting a laser array thing to beam lights into the chip. so much more reliable system, nonetheless it is old tech, i’d stay away unless you want a super huge tv for cheap.

plasmas used to have the market on big sets vs the lcds, but lcds you can get in 65 inches, sometimes 70 (i think sharp had one a while ago), and plasmas can get pretty huge too. LED lcd’s are topping at 55 for the time being.

but thats the gist of it.

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