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#1 |
Junior Member
Nov 2006
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I purchased this TV a few weeks ago. I thought I did my homework and got the TV I wanted. One that would play true 1080p @ 60fps. I wish I had found this site earlyer. Now I find out that sales persons are saying their tv's are 1080p, but you guys say that doesn't neccesaraly mean they are. I was very spacific when I said to the sales person. "I want to be able to play my BD-disk and play station 3 in 1080P @ 60fps. And they said yes it will. If it doesn't, I don't know what Ill do.... Probly piss and moan on the internet for a couple more weeks and kick myself in the ass.
So here goes. Does my 61" samsung HLS6187WX/XAA DLP TV do everything I was hoping it would? |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Knight
Jan 2006
www.blurayoasis.com
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#4 |
Site Manager
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Well I looked around and didn't find anything specific saying "Accepts 1080p signals" but almost everywhere says it's 1080p, and a couple of "reviewers" on Amazon said it did accept it (of course exactly how do they know for sure is uncertain). Also this "review" http://www.htguys.com/archive/2006/June162006.html and one of the reviewers in Amazon say it accepts a 1080 1 to 1 pixel ratio on the PC input (usually a 60Hz) so at least it''s accepting 1080p there, so it could accept it from the HDMI too. What does your manual say? Maybe your dealer can let you try a BD player with the 1080p outputs and see if it works?
If it doesn't, doesn't the store have a return policy? Specially since they sold you something that wouldn't be what you asked specifically for and they told you it was? How about your credit card company? (That is, if it turned out it doesn't accept a 1080p input) If it didn't, the TV is still gonna show you the images as 1080p progressive. It'll just have to deinterlace them from 1080i on its input. Then the important issue would be how well it deinterlaces the signal. In the best of cases, you'll recuperate the whole 1080p sharp image, in the worst of cases you'll get half the vertical resolution, depends on the quality of the deinterlacer (that is, if it only accepted 1080i), read How discernable is 1080p over 1080i ? for a little more info about those issues. One thing is troubling me, reading the few pages I googled, I didn't see mention about the HDMI inputs being HDCP. Hopefully they are, otherwise there might be the case that the High Definition disc player downrezes the resolution to 540 x 960 because of copy protection. Hope everything checks out! |
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#5 |
Super Moderator
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I believe the DLPs use "wobble" to get 1080p60. What you actually are seeing is 1080i120 (1080 lines interlaced at 120 frames per second), which will look extremely similar to 1080p60. Its not the same, but very close.
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#6 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Amazon reviews are based on the opinions of people who may or may not know that of which they speak. Take with a grain of salt and read between the lines.
If you really want to know what your tv does, read the manual, or contact the company support and ask them directly. Maybe you can return it if you site employee incompetence, or lying. Keep in mind, no one in a retail store knows every detail about every product. You have to give up your personal life and sleep to be that good. Give a little leeway to the sales person, but "caveot emptor". Let the buyer beware. |
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