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To: redangus
The problem with my family room is that behind me is a big glass screen door. Even though it has a full height curtain to block out some ambient light, I do have some concerns that a 42" plasma may "wash out" during the day, especially in mid to late afternoon.

As such, I'm still leaning towards the Sony KDL-40EX500 as my first choice, though I'm going to Fry's at their special darkened screening rooms and see if I can find a better model.

42 posted on 02/15/2010 10:17:13 AM PST by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: RayChuang88

I used to have my plasma in a room with a sliding glass door, 4 windows and two skylights. I did have to close the blinds and block one skylight (light directly onto the plasma) but even then there was tremendous ambient light in that room. Washout wasn’t a problem.
I bought an LCD for my father-in-law because brightness was his #1 want. His nursing home room has a wall of windows they never close the blinds. It’s a Phillips and he’s very happy with it.


51 posted on 02/15/2010 10:34:32 AM PST by Varda
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To: RayChuang88
Guess I'll throw my two cents in.

1. Consider the Warranty:

The supposed AVERAGE life on an LCD screen is 5 years.
When the LCD screen goes bad, they are very difficult to fix. Outside the manufacturer's warranty (usually 1 year), you are looking at repairing or, worse yet, replacing the set out of pocket.

We bought an HD TV home theater system on special at Best Buy just before Thanksgiving. The package was all Sony (52” LCD + 120 watt home theater (w/ Blu-Ray) + a second Blu-Ray DVD player) for $1900. (There was also a parallel deal but with a Play Station 3 instead of the second Blu-Ray. But my kids are grown and I want nothing that might tempt them to come back for an extended stay.)

Bought the “no excuses, in-home servicing, three service calls and we replace it” extended warranty from Best Buy. Cost about $300 to get coverage through November 2013. With Sony quality, it might ultimately be a waste of money. But I'm watching the television for the next 4 years without worrying what to do (or how much it will cost me) if a problem develops.

In five years, it will be 3D HD (which will require buying new everything); then onto “smell-o-vision,” I guess.

2. Get a 1080P television with the highest cycle rate (120 or 240 hertz)

1080P is high definition picture resolution rate (as opposed to 720P which is standard definition). To me, watching 720P now makes me feel like I need a new prescription for my glasses. You've seen the difference in the showrooms. The higher hertz rate means the screen “refreshes” more quickly. This is important when watching fast paced sports or CGI-heavy action features in HD.

3. Upgrade Your DVD Player

Get a Blu-Ray DVD player along with your HD TV. (Hopefully in a package deal like the one I got. The 52” LCD television regular price essentially covered the cost of the home theater and 2nd Blu-Ray player.) Yes, Blu-Ray movies are $5.00 to $10.00 more expensive per movie in the stores. Instead, buy them on Amazon or from another on-line retailer at very reasonable prices. The difference in picture quality (especially the CGI heavy/animated features) is tremendous. In addition, for the basic $10.00 monthly subscription fee (3 movies at once), you can have access to literally thousands of Blu-Ray movies through Netflix.

BTW, all of your present DVDs can be played in a Blu-Ray DVD player as well. (That's a general statement; there are probably some oddball DVDs that won't. I have nearly 200 regular DVDs from major studios; so far, they all play fine.)

4. Upgrade Your Cable Box to HD.

I was paying for a cable package that included HD channels I could not access because I did not have an HD television AND an HD cable box. After the television was delivered and set up, I exchanged the box at the local office but still ended up having a technician come to the house when I couldn't get sound with the picture. Turned out to be a signal source selection issue (D’oh!). The HD box costs me an additional $3.00/month.

5. Afternoon light on the LCD screen.

Can't help you much here. From your description, we have a family room setup somewhat similar to yours; but our television wall is at 90 degrees to the big sliding doors. Haven't had any problem with sun glare so far but it is winter now and the sun's angle above the horizon changes going into summer.

Good luck!

61 posted on 02/15/2010 11:33:07 AM PST by Captain Rhino (“Si vis pacem, para bellum” - if you want peace, prepare for war.)
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To: RayChuang88

I would agree. If you have that type of lighting a plasma might not work well in that room.


64 posted on 02/15/2010 11:50:44 AM PST by redangus
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To: RayChuang88
The problem with my family room is that behind me is a big glass screen door. Even though it has a full height curtain to block out some ambient light, I do have some concerns that a 42" plasma may "wash out" during the day, especially in mid to late afternoon.

Got a 42" Samsung plasma. The lighting can be a problem at times but I think the picture is better than an LCD.

Paid $650 for the 720p at BJ's.

83 posted on 02/15/2010 5:29:10 PM PST by raybbr
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