Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (
More info?)
The answer is Hitachi. I did a lot of research before buying my Hitachi
RPTV and the conclusion was that Hitachi is pretty much the best. They
developed their own technology and it's mature, and it's even used by other
manufacturers. When I bought my set I went to a smaller local business to
make the purchase because of after sales service. When I went into their
showroom I discovered that they only carried two brands of RPTV's, Hitachi
and Sony. The salesman told me that they carry those models because of
their quality and little or no after sales service is required which is good
for their bottom line. Sounded good to me. I've had the set for a year now
and have no complaints.
JK
"Eddie G" <mickeddie@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:6799ea2c.0407131406.2585a88f@posting.google.com...
> caloonese@yahoo.com (Caloonese) wrote in message
news:<ee67c74a.0407131053.14ec5e7b@posting.google.com>...
> > Do you know a 34" widescreen is very small compared to a 36" square TV
> > because the way the screen size is measured diagonally? They probably
> > give you the same width on the outside. But the widescreen probably
> > only give you half the screen area compare to the square TV when you
> > watch SD programmings. It seems odd to me that you mentioned two TVs
> > with such big size difference in the same sentence.
>
> I know...I also read that a 36 inch displaying in 16:9 gives you 33"
> on the screen, so square box is definitly out.
>
> > If you plan to go HD, of course buy widescreen. A widescreen
> > maximizes the HD viewing, and give decent 4x3 viewing. On the
> > contrary, a square TV minimizes the HD experience and at the same time
> > exaggerates the interior SD. You want the picture to be big when the
> > picture is in high resolution, you don't really want to blow up a low
> > resolution picture real big to see all the flaws of NTSC. Remember
> > the quality of the picture is more important than the size of the
> > picture. You are supposed to highlight the good and hide the bad, not
> > the reverse. The only advantage of square TV is that you may get a
> > better deal because it is the opposite trend.
> >
> > For projection TV, you need to compare the technology behind the
> > screen. CRT based, LCD based and DLP, front or rear projection, each
> > has its pros and cons. Screen burn-in is also an important
> > consideration when you choose the technology. CRT based projection is
> > prone to burn-in, but LCD projection is prone to dead pixels over
> > time, DLP projection has rainbow problem or broken color wheel problem
> > for the low end, but the 3 chips DLP can be very expensive. If you
> > have a lot of money to spend a highend 3 chips DLP projection TV is
> > the best TV you can buy IMHO. You need to really sit down to see what
> > you like better.
>
> I would be looking at rear projection CRT as that is in my budget.
>
> So now I ask, which manufacturer makes the best rear projection CRT
> HDTV? Also, which models are recommended? I've found that just
> because the sony KV34HS510 got great reviews, a different sony model
> is not as good as, say, a toshiba.
>
> Thanks!!
>
> Eddie G