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How To Choose Your HDTV

Article on How To Choose Your HDTV is from Consumer Reports, December 2005 issue.

"Buy the largest HDTV your budget and your space will allow.  A big screen makes HD programming especially compelling.  In a recent survey of HDTV owners, we found that satisfaction increased with screen size.  Many owners said they would buy a larger screen if they could do it over.  If you're waffling between two sizes, you'll probably be happier in the long run with the bigger set.  Decide what you're willing to spend and see how much screen that will buy you."

"Also consider room size.  Any big-screen TV will look larger in your home than in a showroom.  Make sure you can view the TV from the appropriate distance:  at least 5 feet for 36-inch or smaller HD sets and 6 to 9 feet for 4-inch to 65-inch screens."

"Stick with a wide-screen set.  Plasma and rear-projection TVs all have wide screen, but with LCD or picture-tube sets, you may have a choice of a squarish, 4:3 screen or a wide screen with a 16:9 aspect ratio (some are 15:9).  The 4:3 sets cost less, but resist:  The shape isn't as well suited to HD content and DVDs.  The HDTV owners in our survey showed a clear preference for wide screens."

"Don't rule out sets lacking built-in digital tuners.  HD-ready sets, also called HDTV monitors, are the lowest-cost type of HDTV, and there's no reason to pass them up.  They require an external digital tuner such as a cable or satellite box to get HD broadcasts, but that's no big deal.  Even TVs with integrated digital tuners need an HD-capable cable box or CableCard or a satellite box to get HD via those services.  The only plus to integrated HDTVs is that they can receive broadcast digital signals, including HD, via antenna, an option few viewers use."

"Integrated HDTVs that are digital-cable-ready (DCR) can receive HD programming without a box when a CableCard (from the company) is inserted into a slot on the TV.  But you'll still need a cable box to get an interactive program guide, video on demand, or pay-per-view ordering via the remote.  Second-generation DCR TVs and Cable Cards with interactive features are expected soon."

"Consider reliability.  Different TV technologies vary in reliability, so you might want to factor that into your selection.  Conventional picture-tube TVs have a long track record for very good reliability overall."

"There's less information on newer TV types.  Initial survey data show that LCD and plasma TVs have been as reliable as picture-tube TVs during their first year of use, but it's too soon to know about later years. For the first time, we can report on specific brands.  There were no repair issues during the first year of use for LCD flat panels from Panasonic, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, and Toshiba, and for Panasonic and Sony plasma sets."

"Rear-projection TV using CRTs have been much more repair-prone than conventional tube TVs, with double the rate of repairs for five-year-old sets.  Repair rates for the four brands for which we have date (Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Sony, and Toshiba) were comparable."

"Microdisplays using LCD, DLP, or LCoS technology have been even more repair-prone than CRT-based projection sets during their first year of operation, according to initial data.  Toshiba DLP sets have been less repair-prone than most; JVC LCoS sets-JVC calls the technology D-ILA--have been more repair-prone.  (That may be related to a recall of some JVC TVs.  The company has said it will repair faulty sets at no cost to the user.)"  

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