XSIHardy
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Registered: 5th Feb 08
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Morning,
looking into buying a new LED TV after crimbo , just wanted to know has any one got one ?
and is the picture quality all that good?
looking to spend MAX ! 700 if needed 800 but thats ultra stretch
any one got any recommendations ?
cheers sam
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deano87
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Registered: 21st Oct 06
Location: Bedfordshire Drives: Ford Fiesta
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I recently bought a new TV and when looking round the shops I was really impressed with the LED stuff. Excelleng quality close up compared to LCD. They're super thin too.
Pretty useless informatiin as I have nothing else to say
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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LED uses LCD still, just uses LED's for back lighting instead of CFL's.
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BarnshaW
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Registered: 25th Oct 06
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also be wary of FULL LED units and LED units, the later units dont have FULL led's behind the screen it is only on the border/outside of the screen.
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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I've got an LG 37LE5300 and it's the shiz. I was in Richer sounds comparing TV's for ages and the colours were just stand out. Couldn't be happier with it tbh.
http://www.reevoo.com/p/lg-37le5300
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BarnshaW
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Registered: 25th Oct 06
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good TV nath, one of the ones from the range of LG that dont break or have known problems
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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Well thats a relief
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whitter45
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Registered: 15th Nov 02
Location: Norton
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Sony - Cant beat the pciture quality of the higher end units
I have 2 at the moment
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Daniel_Corsa
Premium Member
Registered: 21st Apr 04
Location: Wigton, Cumbria
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I've just bought a series 6 LED Samsung, very impressed so far!
Nice bright colours, black blacks, and sound isn't all that bad for standard speakers!
April '06' Corsasport Feature Car | Aug '08' Total Vauxhall Feature Car | Spring '09' Fast Car Feature Car
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A2H GO
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Registered: 14th Sep 04
Location: Stoke
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So is the picture quality on these better than a normal backlit 1080p TV or are you just paying the extra £200-300 because they're thinner?
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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Contrast ratio's are generally better.
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AndyKent
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Registered: 3rd Sep 05
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I'm really tempted to go for a Samsung LED 40" though the cost is a bit higher than I would have liked.
£500 seems like a sensible price, whereas the LED I saw in John Lewis this weekend was £700. Looked great, but still a lot of cash.
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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Mine was £499, but that's 37".
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A2H GO
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Registered: 14th Sep 04
Location: Stoke
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quote: Originally posted by Nath
Contrast ratio's are generally better.
Refresh me, is that the difference between the darkest and lightest capable colour? So generally the colours are more vivid however there are the same number of pixels on the screen?
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LeeM
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Registered: 26th Sep 05
Location: Liverpool
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my friendsa got a samsung 50 led, with hd input like sky hd or blu ray its incredible ive never seen anytihng that good!
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Kurt
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Registered: 23rd Oct 05
Location: Hi
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I recently bought a Sony Bravia 40" for 500
Was the best looking in the shop at time, even next to an led it looked sharper and crisper
Has a ton of features too, hd freeview receiver built in, BBC iplayer, you tube, 5 on demand, love film and ability to play from a network computer
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AndyKent
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Registered: 3rd Sep 05
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I'll have to look up all the features before I do anything. I saw some TV that you could plug in a USB stick to add recording and transfer to PC too
That said, I do need to buy some new internal doors first
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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quote: Originally posted by A2H GO
quote: Originally posted by Nath
Contrast ratio's are generally better.
Refresh me, is that the difference between the darkest and lightest capable colour? So generally the colours are more vivid however there are the same number of pixels on the screen?
http://tv.about.com/od/hdtv/a/contrastratio.htm
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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TBH that link is pretty negative when it comes to a good contrast ratio, best bet is to view the TV's in the shop. The difference for me was extremely obvious. But then there are other factors. It took me ages to find the right TV
[Edited on 23-11-2010 by Nath]
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A2H GO
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Registered: 14th Sep 04
Location: Stoke
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Nath
TBH that link is pretty negative when it comes to a good contrast ratio, best bet is to view the TV's in the shop. The difference for me was extremely obvious. But then there are other factors. It took me ages to find the right TV
[Edited on 23-11-2010 by Nath]
Dont the people who are a bit anal about it say you should never choose a TV based on the picture in the shop due to the flouresent artificial lighting and varying levels of input methods, SD, HD, 1080p making some TVs 'look' better than others, sometimes depending on which ones they need to get rid of.
[Edited on 23-11-2010 by A2H GO]
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Nath
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Registered: 3rd Apr 02
Location: MK
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Yeah they do mate. But Richer Sounds seem reliable enough to base those decisions on. The salesman even got me to buy the cheaper, smaller TV as it was better than the slightly bigger LCD equivelant.
I was hunting for ages, but after a while you realise whatever TV you are going to get for £700-800 is going to be good. It's just what features you want most.
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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For your average Joe it's probably best to pick the one you like the look of in the shops, that's probably exactly how it will look when it's plugged in and they don't touch anything again.
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A2H GO
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Registered: 14th Sep 04
Location: Stoke
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Nath
Yeah they do mate. But Richer Sounds seem reliable enough to base those decisions on. The salesman even got me to buy the cheaper, smaller TV as it was better than the slightly bigger LCD equivelant.
I was hunting for ages, but after a while you realise whatever TV you are going to get for £700-800 is going to be good. It's just what features you want most.
Just been looking on the RS website. I'm after a 50", not too bothered what make, LCD/Plasma or whether its got Freeview built in as long as its 1080p. Holding out for the sales in a few weeks though, there £550 on the site now so hopefully come down a bit.
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Dom
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Registered: 13th Sep 03
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quote: Originally posted by A2H GO
quote: Originally posted by Nath
Yeah they do mate. But Richer Sounds seem reliable enough to base those decisions on. The salesman even got me to buy the cheaper, smaller TV as it was better than the slightly bigger LCD equivelant.
I was hunting for ages, but after a while you realise whatever TV you are going to get for £700-800 is going to be good. It's just what features you want most.
Just been looking on the RS website. I'm after a 50", not too bothered what make, LCD/Plasma or whether its got Freeview built in as long as its 1080p. Holding out for the sales in a few weeks though, there £550 on the site now so hopefully come down a bit.
For 1080p, make sure the native resolution is 1920×1080. A lot of manufactures use panels that conform to CEA standards rather than ATSC the broadcasting standard, so you'll find 720 HD displays with a resolution of 1366x768 (not quite 16:9) rather than the broadcast resolution of 1280×720 (16:9) - which results in the image being upscaled to fit the screen. On smalls screen it generally isn't noticed but it can be noticeable on large screens, depends how good the onboard scalers are.
Also when viewing a TV make sure they aren't running multiple TVs of one source, like a bd player, as it can lower picture quality (have seen this a few times in Comets, Dixons even Richer Sounds). And I’d get them to reset all picture/sound quality controls back to factory standards as it isn't uncommon for shops to pump up brightness, contrast and colours of one screen and lower others to help sales etc.
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A2H GO
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Registered: 14th Sep 04
Location: Stoke
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Dom
quote: Originally posted by A2H GO
quote: Originally posted by Nath
Yeah they do mate. But Richer Sounds seem reliable enough to base those decisions on. The salesman even got me to buy the cheaper, smaller TV as it was better than the slightly bigger LCD equivelant.
I was hunting for ages, but after a while you realise whatever TV you are going to get for £700-800 is going to be good. It's just what features you want most.
Just been looking on the RS website. I'm after a 50", not too bothered what make, LCD/Plasma or whether its got Freeview built in as long as its 1080p. Holding out for the sales in a few weeks though, there £550 on the site now so hopefully come down a bit.
For 1080p, make sure the native resolution is 1920×1080. A lot of manufactures use panels that conform to CEA standards rather than ATSC the broadcasting standard, so you'll find 720 HD displays with a resolution of 1366x768 (not quite 16:9) rather than the broadcast resolution of 1280×720 (16:9) - which results in the image being upscaled to fit the screen. On smalls screen it generally isn't noticed but it can be noticeable on large screens, depends how good the onboard scalers are.
Also when viewing a TV make sure they aren't running multiple TVs of one source, like a bd player, as it can lower picture quality (have seen this a few times in Comets, Dixons even Richer Sounds). And I’d get them to reset all picture/sound quality controls back to factory standards as it isn't uncommon for shops to pump up brightness, contrast and colours of one screen and lower others to help sales etc.
Cheers for this. TBH ill no doubt run the TV by peeps on here before purchasing.
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