There's a lot to consider when shopping for a projector; here are some important things to think about: 1. DLP, LCD, or LCoS? - In very general terms, single-chip DLP projectors tend to be the least-expensive option, followed by LCD, then LCoS, and finally 3-chip DLP, though of course, there is some overlap. - LCoS projectors tend to have the best black levels and native contrast. - LCD and ...
The heat output from lowest to highest is LED-LCD, CCFL-LCD then Plasma. Which not surprisingly is directly correlated to the energy consumed. The LED draws ~110 watts, the CCFL ~150 watts and the Plasma ~300 watts during normal cable TV viewing. The larger LED draws less power than the smaller CCFL and significantly less than the smaller Plasma.
You get half 4K resolution from LCD, which is strictly Epson at this point, right up to their 5050UB model for about $3,000. From there, you get their 4 way shifting 4K models in the LS11000 and LS12000 models.
For an LCD TV (QLED is LCD with an LED backlight), I'd avoid Samsung just because they do not support Dolby Vision. I'm not that interested in format wars, but as regards Dolby Vision, Samsung appears to be the whole of the anti- side. Their products are good, otherwise.
I am mounting a 49" LCD on the wall and behind the TV I am mounting the small genie box and Google Chrome cast. I need power for 4 items the TV, the soundbar, the small DirecTV genie Box, and the Chromecast.
Not only many LCD TVs suffer from this issue but even more OLEDs.. It will more/only show up in very dark shades of grey.. There goes the advantage of perfect blacks right out of the window.. Plasma TVs where super good in that regard and you enjoyed perfect screen uniformity for a very long time..
This thread will be a work in progress and will list the various Panasonic DVDRs available in the US starting with the newest and going backwards. I will update this first post as information becomes available. If you know of a Panasonic model that's not listed please post Model number, year...
Plasma has been gone for nearly a decade, but imo it still holds up and a budget plasma still destroys a budget led tv. To me personally in order for a good led tv to destroy a great plasma tv in a dimly lit room you have to have 4k 60fps. That's when the LCD tv destroys the plasma. That's when...