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#1 |
Senior Member
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I'm looking to purchase a good HD tv. I have been looking at a couple of 40" Sony Bravia TVs. I know that 100Hz is supposed to be better but it image just look unnatural to me. Is this something that you will get used to or doesn't it matter to much for blu-rays?
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#2 |
Active Member
Sep 2009
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Every TV has picture modes and setting so you can change the way the picture looks, there is no 100Hz LCD, 120Hz though.
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#3 |
Senior Member
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These are the two I have been looking at:
http://www.sony.com.au/product/kdl-40w5500 http://www.sony.com.au/product/kdl-40v5500 |
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#6 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Never mind, Wikipedia came to the rescue, it's 25 fps in UK, etc...makes sense lol
"All of these coding methods are in use to some extent. In PAL countries, 25 frames/s formats remain the norm. In NTSC countries, most digital broadcasts of 24 frames/s material, both standard and high definition, continue to use interlaced formats with 2:3 pulldown. Native 24 and 23.976 frames/s formats offer the greatest image quality and coding efficiency, and are widely used in motion picture and high definition video production. However, most consumer video devices do not support these formats. Recently however, several vendors have begun selling LCD televisions in NTSC/ATSC countries that are capable of 120Hz refresh rates and plasma sets capable of 48, 72, or 96Hz refresh.[10] When combined with a 1080p24-capable source (such as most Blu-ray players), some of these sets are able to display film-based content using a pulldown scheme of whole multiples of 24, thereby avoiding the problems associated with 2:3 pulldown or the 4% speed-up used in PAL countries" |
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#7 |
Active Member
Sep 2009
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#8 |
Power Member
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#9 |
Active Member
Sep 2009
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