Thursday, March 22, 2012

LG 42CS560 42-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8±LG 42CS560 42-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG
Rate :
Price : Too low to display
Post Date : Mar 22, 2012 22:42:07
Usually ships in 24 hours



CS560 LCD HDTV

Looking for an HDTV with great picture quality at an affordable price? You've found it with CS560 LCD HDTV.

CS560 HDTV
KEY TECHNOLOGIES
  • Double the detail.

    Double the detail

    This stunning picture is the reason you wanted HDTV in the first place. With almost double the pixel resolution, Full HD 1080p gives it superior picture quality over standard HD. You'll see details and colors like never before.

  • Picture Wizard

    Find the perfect picture

    Get easy self-calibration with on-screen reference points for key picture quality elements such as black level, color, tint, sharpness and backlight levels. Take the guesswork out of picture adjustments with this simple-to-use feature.

  • Intelligent Sensor.

    View it in the right light

    Let your TV do the adjustments for you. LG's Intelligent Sensor automatically optimizes the picture to the lighting and color conditions in the room for a more enjoyable viewing experience.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES
Wise and not wasteful

With our Smart Energy Saving Features, you can conserve money and energy.

ISFCCC® READY

LG's ISFccc Ready HDTVs contain the detailed standards necessary for professional calibration of brightness, contrast, tint, sharpness, color levels and much more to meet local lighting conditions for both day and nighttime viewing. Settings are added to preset modes for easy access from your LG remote.

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Monday, March 19, 2012

LG 32CS560 32-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8±LG 32CS560 32-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG
Rate :
Price : $399.99
Post Date : Mar 19, 2012 03:24:32
Usually ships in 24 hours



CS560 LCD HDTV

Looking for an HDTV with great picture quality at an affordable price? You've found it with CS560 LCD HDTV.

CS560 HDTV
KEY TECHNOLOGIES
  • Double the detail.

    Double the detail

    This stunning picture is the reason you wanted HDTV in the first place. With almost double the pixel resolution, Full HD 1080p gives it superior picture quality over standard HD. You'll see details and colors like never before.

  • Picture Wizard

    Find the perfect picture

    Get easy self-calibration with on-screen reference points for key picture quality elements such as black level, color, tint, sharpness and backlight levels. Take the guesswork out of picture adjustments with this simple-to-use feature.

  • Intelligent Sensor.

    View it in the right light

    Let your TV do the adjustments for you. LG's Intelligent Sensor automatically optimizes the picture to the lighting and color conditions in the room for a more enjoyable viewing experience.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES
Wise and not wasteful

With our Smart Energy Saving Features, you can conserve money and energy.

ISFCCC® READY

LG's ISFccc Ready HDTVs contain the detailed standards necessary for professional calibration of brightness, contrast, tint, sharpness, color levels and much more to meet local lighting conditions for both day and nighttime viewing. Settings are added to preset modes for easy access from your LG remote.

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Thursday, March 15, 2012

LG 37LK450 37-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8± LG 37LK450 37-Inch 1080p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG | Rate : | Price : $449.98
Post Date : Mar 15, 2012 17:21:16 | Usually ships in 24 hours

If you been hearing about how amazing Blu-ray entertainment is, or how much better your favorite shows would look in HD, you've heard right. The thing is, you need 1080p Full HD to get the most out of both. With the 37LK450, you can.

  • Full HD 1080p gives it superior picture quality over standard HDTV - you'll see details and colors like never before
  • Dynamic contrast ratio of 100,000:1 delivers incredibly vibrant colors and deeper and darker blacks
  • Energy Star qualified so your entertainment experience uses less energy
  • Picture Wizard II allows for self-calibration with on-screen reference points to ensure terrific black, color, tint, sharpness and backlight levels
  • The Intelligent Sensor automatically optimizes the picture to the lighting and color conditions in the room for a more enjoyable viewing experience

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Saturday, March 10, 2012

LG 55LK520 55-Inch 1080p 120 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8± LG 55LK520 55-Inch 1080p 120 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG | Rate : | Price : Too low to display
Post Date : Mar 10, 2012 22:37:17 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days

If you want high definition for your HD content, games and Blu-ray entertainment, there's nothing better than 1080p Full HD. And if you want sports and fast action to be as a crisp as they are exciting, TruMotion 120Hz virtually loses the blur and keeps the sizzle. The LK520 1080p LCD TV brings you both along with the other great features that make LG TVs something better.

  • It has TruMotion 120Hz
  • It has Picture Wizard II (Easy Picture Calibration)
  • It has full HD 1080p Resolution
  • It is ENERGY STAR Qualified
  • It is ISFccc Ready

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Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Sunday, March 4, 2012

LG 32LK330 32-Inch 720p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8± LG 32LK330 32-Inch 720p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG | Rate : | Price : Too low to display
Post Date : Mar 04, 2012 03:49:47 | Usually ships in 24 hours


  • High Definition Resolution for more vibrant colors and a richer entertainment experience
  • Energy Star qualified so your entertainment experiene uses less energy
  • Picture Wizard II allows for self-calibration with on-screen reference points to ensure terrifc black, color, tint, sharpness and backlight levels
  • The Intelligent Sensor automatically optimizes the picture to the lighting and color conditions in the room for a more enjoyable viewing experience

More Specification..!!

LG 32LK330 32-Inch 720p 60 Hz LCD HDTV

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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

LG 47LK520 47-Inch 1080p 120 Hz LCD HDTV

!±8±LG 47LK520 47-Inch 1080p 120 Hz LCD HDTV

Brand : LG
Rate :
Price : Too low to display
Post Date : Feb 29, 2012 11:30:27
Usually ships in 24 hours



If you want high definition for your HD content, games and Blu-ray entertainment, there's nothing better than 1080p Full HD. And if you want sports and fast action to be as a crisp as they are exciting, TruMotion 120Hz virtually loses the blur and keeps the sizzle. The 47LK520 1080p LCD TV brings you both along with the other great features that make LG TVs something better.

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Plasma Calibration Without Spending A Single Dime

!±8± Plasma Calibration Without Spending A Single Dime

Ok, you've gone out and bought a brand spanking new plasma TV, but how do you make sure that you're getting the best picture out of it? To do that you need to adjust the picture settings on your plasma TV, otherwise known as "plasma calibration" in the AV industry.

Before you start, you should know that the best calibration for your plasma TV will depend on your source material (i.e. what you're watching), your input device (e.g. DVD player or satellite box) and the amount of ambient light in your home environment... among other things. You should also be aware that your plasma TV needs to be run in for at least 200 hours to allow the phosphors to stabilize, or else you will have to repeat your plasma TV calibration in the future.

You may not own a plasma TV calibration DVD, so this article will try to walk you through the steps using readily available material. Remember to use the best available connection to connect your input device to your plasma TV. In descending order, the cleanest signal (and hence best picture quality) can be obtained via: HDMI = DVI > VGA = component > SCART (RGB) > S-Video > Composite.

1. Adjust Brightness. This actually determines the black level on your plasma TV: too high a setting and black will look gray; too low and dark grays are swallowed into blackness. To set brightness to its proper level, simply play a DVD with lots of black scenes (e.g. opening scene from Star Wars). Now crank your brightness up until the black on your plasma TV look gray, then slowly dial your brightness down until the black in the movie JUST matches the black on the black bars on top and bottom of the movie.

2. Adjust Contrast. This determines the white level and is responsible for how much light your plasma TV actually emits. To set contrast correctly, play a DVD scene containing a shiny bald head/forehead (e.g. The Fifth Element). Now increase contrast until the bald patch is glaringly hurting your eyes, and then tone it down until you're satisfied that you can see all the detail within the white.

3. Adjust Sharpness. For most poorly-encoded source material you want to use this to enhance the edges, but if done excessively this will introduce haloing and ringing around edges. It's best to bring up a "User Menu" (from your DVD, satellite box, etc) to adjust sharpness: increase it until lots of ringing artifacts occur around the edges of the words, then decrease it until the ringing just disappears.

4. Adjust Color. Color can either be too saturated or too dull... either way the picture will not look right, with the most noticeable errors found in skin tones and green foliage. As a rough guide, you can use a DVD scene with a hand and tinker with the color until the color matches that of your own hand.

What I've described above is 4 basic steps for plasma calibration using only what's available to you. If you wish to strive for more accuracy you can get a HDTV calibration DVD, but you'll need to know which one to buy and how to use it to calibrate plasma TV because the majority of them are still catered for the CRT market.


Plasma Calibration Without Spending A Single Dime

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Guide to Hi-Def TV Specifications

!±8± Guide to Hi-Def TV Specifications

Want to buy a high-def TV but just don't know how to figure out the specifications to choose the best sets? Here's a short guide to some of the most common specs you'll be faced with.

Contrast ratings - a measurement of the darkest blacks to the lightest whites - Panasonic boasts of a 18000:1 contrast rating for their best plasma. In nearly every case, you'll find that plasma TVs have better contrast ratings than any other high-def TV, but you don't necessarily need off-the-charts contrast ratings to have a television you'll enjoy. An 1800:1 makes most people happy, and in a darkened room you often can't tell much difference, though it will be obvious in a showroom.

1080p and 1080i - These numbers refer to the horizontal lines that make up your television image. Traditional televisions - and traditional TV broadcasts - have a 480i; most modern high-def TVs have 1080 or better. The p and i refer to the method the television uses to interpret these lines. An i is an interlaced picture, where every other line refreshes, usually every 1/60 of a second. A p displays all the lines at once, and refreshes either every 1/60 or 1/30 of a second. Look for sets that have a high number and the p for best pictures. Also, for best results look for Blu-ray sets that match this number for your television; some televisions designed for interlaced images cannot handle a Blu-ray set only for p.

Scaling - Refers to the ideal resolution for your television's picture. This is more important for a front-projection DLP TV than any other set, as it determines the maximum and minimum picture for good viewing.

Artifacts - Auras, ghost images, sharp edges, and other distracting things that can detract from your high-def TV's good image processing. A television reviewed as having few or no artifacts is always better than one that has some complaints.

De-judder processing - this refers to the sometimes-jerky motion when frames change too slowly. Because high-def TVs are in essence computing devices, this depends heavily on internal processor speed as well as good programming at the factory. Some experts complain that certain sets do too good a job at de-juddering, and as a result the image is unnaturally smooth in motion. Most consumers are happier with this sort of set, though, so the better your de-judder is the happier you will probably be.

Resolution - Most sets have at least 1920 x 1080 resolution, referencing the vertical x horizontal lines your set will display. High resolutions indicate better pictures, provided everything else works well.

Color-temperature presets -- With values like Cool1 and Neutral, these presets skew your television's color settings toward blues or reds. These settings are not necessarily a make-or-break thing for your high-def TV, but it's nice to be able to skew your picture without fiddling with every color setting. Most high-def TVs have many other color settings you can mess around with, but none of them are critical.

There are several other specs, with more being created every day, but these should help you choose a great high def TV for your needs.


Guide to Hi-Def TV Specifications

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