Posted on 06/10/2007 4:34:19 AM PDT by MississippiMasterpiece
I've been setting aside money for a new HDTV and have about $2,000 to spend. Would appreciate any recommendations from Freepers that have made recent purchases. Obviously, I'd like the biggest screen for my buck, but am most interested in picture clarity.
Remember, if an online company, such as Best Buy or WalMart, has a brick and mortar store in the state of delivery, you will still have to pay sales tax.
I have been saving for a TV as well (to surprise hubby when he gets home), and I have decided to go with Samsung. Every Samsung product I have owned has lasted forever. I’m not overly concerned with TV shows for the HD, but my husband does play a lot of XBox, and we watch a lot of DVDs. I noticed you can get a DVD player now that converts regular DVDs to near HD quality.
First of all, thanks for YOUR service (and hubbys, of course). It is greatly appreciated.
LG is making some great products, too.
Have you shopped AAFES (www.aafes.com)? I’m assuming you are a military family. You can get free shipping and no tax on products.
.....Bob
Like all this new technology, nothing is static, so it is difficult to decide, until you see it for yourself. UHDV is coming down the pike.
Pinging the list..
I have a 2 year old Panasonic 26in LCD TV. We don’t have the room or the money for anything larger. One of our favorite HD shows is “Sunrise Earth” — a must watch.
Would appreciate any recommendations from Freepers that have made recent purchases.
NO, but I can tell you what not to buy, a Sony.
My daughter purchased a Sony, 1-1/2 years ago, large screen with the extended warranty from Sears. It has taken them two months to repair the TV. The part that was bad!?/ they no longer produce it so, she had to wait for them to make it.
Sears tried to void the warranty, wanted them to purchase another TV. WHAT A CROCK!!!!!!!
Here is one for starters:
http://www.highdefforum.com/
The largest TV's at the best prices are the DLP. They are deeper than plasma and LCD but not near as deep as the old projection TV's. Unless you plan on mounting the TV on the wall the extra depth of a DLP should not matter.
Buy the new Vizio 47” LCD and use the extra $1,000 for a new Barcolounger, keg-fridge, hot dog steamer and a keg of Guinness.
Then, all you will need is one of those portable urinals and you won’t have to leave your chair all day.
I’ve got a 60” Hitachi “Ultravision” that I purchased in 1995 and it has never missed a beat. Although it is not HDTV the picture quality is as good as one could get back then. Obviously it is obsolete today but until I find something as reliable and as good in HDTV I’m going to continue to watch this one until it stops working. But I need a minimum of 60” and 70” would be even better. I also agree about the Samsung LCDs. I have a 21 inch LCD computer monitor and it is the class of the field in my opinion. I can’t imagine what a 60” or 70” LCD HDTV would cost but that would be my choice if I had my druthers. But like most, I don’t have a clue to ask to get the right answers either.
I have the Westinghouse 42 and 47” 1080p LCD sets. I would highly recommend them. Both are well under $2000, and you’ll have enough money left over to buy an HD DVD or Blu-Ray player.
>>I have the Westinghouse 42 and 47 1080p LCD sets. I would highly recommend them. Both are well under $2000, and youll have enough money left over to buy an HD DVD or Blu-Ray player.<<
Westinghouse is a good choice too. This is not the American Westinghouse, of course, they are Koreans licensing the name but they produce better sets, particularly the screen itself than their prices would suggest. And you really do want 1080P native resolution. There is no other good choice than 1080p for the future.
The only issue with the Westinghouse is you have to remember it truly is just a big monitor; there is no built-in TV tuner. This shouldn’t be a problem for anyone considering a high definition set, though, since I assume most have cable boxes.
Another great thing about the Westinghouse sets (other than the great price) is the number of inputs. VGA, HDMI, 2 DVI, 2 component, and S-Video. It works great for people with multiple electronic devices. I have a PS3, XBox 360, Wii, and the cable box attached to my 42” set.
I've had good experiences with mine.
I'd throw in that whatever you do, makes sure you get the extended warantee. These sets are good, but it's handy to have the insurance.
Good points. The screen quality and the inputs are two most important features and Westinghouse excels at those. But the sets do lack bells and whistles. Westinghouse made a deliberate choice to concentrate on screen quality.
But like you say, most people will have cable or satellites and a PC and those will do pretty much everything for you that Westinghouse did not put in.
>>The choice is clear: a Sony Bravia LCD TV. I have the 40” set and I’m very happy with mine. For $2,0000 you can’t go wrong with Sony. Its simply value for your HDTV dollars.<<
Sony was actually my first choice. But the 52 inch Bravia was $3,000 even on sale. By going Mitsubishi and DLP I got a much bigger set for much less money at nearly equal quality.
If I could have any TV in the world it would be a Sony, the Sony KDSR70XBR2 70” 1080P Grand Wega Sxrd XBR HDTV but then you are up to $4000 on sale (against a $6000 list).
BTW, I found Nextag.com very helpful at locating online pricing and Salescircular.com to be priceless for finding local deals. For example here is a search for TV’s 50-60 inches between $1550 and $1900.
http://www.nextag.com/Televisions—PRICE-1550-to-1900—a-Screen+Size-_-50%22+-+60%22—zz500014zB4z5-—html
You can narrow the search more if you like. For example that page tells you only one of those has a headphone jack.
For example here is a link that finds TVs 42 inches and larger on sale this week in Mississippi.
http://www.salescircular.com/ms/video/giantp.shtml
Cool! They showed that technology in the movie 'Back the Future - Part II'.
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