Rounding Out the Top HDTV Models Available
An HDTV should never be an impulse investment for the majority of consumers. The good news is, it doesn’t need to become a course in electrical engineering, either. While researching these televisions, it is quite routine for a normal consumer to be overwhelmed by a sea of acronyms, dimensions and jingoism, particularly if you don’t know very much about electronics. Some customers find that sort of techno-speak to be instructive, but many others don’t. In order to address that situation, we have complied a few helpful HDTV reviews that try to merely let you know how effectively the products function, without getting into the mysterious details of how they really accomplish that task. A great model is the Sony Bravia KDL-46S5100 HDTV.
Samsung UNB8500
This HDTV is quite close to doing the impossible – being too rich and too thin. Samsung’s top model is priced at close to $4000 and comes with an ultraslim profile, rendering it today’s supermodel of HDTVs. Every flat panel display is a fashionable, well-proportioned item whether it performs properly or not. That specific flat-panel screen additionally displays the most detailed picture quality available from an LCD screen at the moment. Because it is a flat-panel LCD screen, though, the best place for watching is immediately in front of that screen. If you are standing at an angle compared to the screen, you may have a tough time seeing the movie or the excuse for that price tag.
Panasonic TC-P50V10
Panasonic’s highest quality plasma HDTV really gives us a more detailed display than Samsung’s top quality product mentioned above. Not surprisingly, this is owing to the fact that plasma screens usually display a picture better than LCD screens usually. You could see the high-definition video from many angles as opposed to being trapped immediately in front of the flat screen. The picture you are enjoying is higher quality, as well, since instead of being made up of pixels, or incredibly small squares, the picture gels together as if it were being translated through liquid, which it is. It’s possible that only the fussiest videophiles will even worry about that difference, so why should anyone else find this attractive? Possibly because Panasonic’s plasma TV is priced almost $2000 less than Samsung’s slice of pixel paradise.
Sharp AQUOS LC-32D62U
Sharp also has a substantial representative in the monster-sized, many-pixel arena. It includes a high-resolution LCD screen that provides especially lifelike visuals when you stand at an angle from the screen, not merely when you are trapped precisely in front of it. Sharp’s HDTV is particularly handy since it has a set of integrated HDMI converters, which enable you to attach devices including game systems which are less than HDTV compatible. There are two more HD component inputs, for consumers who are upgrading each of their components at once, and intend to use it all right now. Sharp’s marvelous toy comes with one more attractive feature: its sales price of less than $1200 makes it practically affordable when balanced against our two other reviewed HDTVs. Another nice option is the Sony Bravia KDL-52XBR9 HDTV.
You can see many different high performance HDTVs for sale today, and they are available in sizes and prices to fulfill anyone’s wants. The important priorities for most of us to zero in on is the package we seriously want and what we are planning to pay for it. Happy shopping!