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First of all, don’t assume you need a huge video screen in your media room.
If your screen is too large, visual fatigue will detract from your theater
experience. A good, but general rule for screen size is to select a screen width
that is half to one third the distance from the screen to the primary viewing
location. You should keep the viewing cone, formed by a line going from your
eyes to each side of the screen, to about thirty degrees.
You can use any display device and there advantages and disadvantages to each
type. DLP units tend to have better black levels than LCD units. LCOS units and
variations have the tightest pixel structure.
Front Projection:
Advantages
- A front projection set will produce the largest, most dynamic image. With a
good projector and screen combination the image will be quite stunning,
especially when watching native HDTV content. If you have never seen the picture
produced by a good, front projection set up, you really should see one before
you make any decisions.
Disadvantages:
- Needs ambient light control. You need to control ambient light to get a really
good picture because a front projection system cannot produce black. It must
rely on the absence of light being reflected from the screen to show black or
dark colors.
- You have to have a physical projector mounted somewhere. This problem has
improved tremendously in the last few years as CRT projectors have basically
gone away and digital projectors have improved and shrunk to miniscule
proportions.
- Video projectors are noisy. They require cooling fans and these are loud. Some
recent units however, are much quieter.
- The larger picture and better detail reproduction will allow you to really see
problems so you need to have quality video sources or the picture will suffer.
- Many of the projectors on the market are either business presentation units or
adapted from them. Business presentation projectors have much different
requirements than home theater projectors. The most important requirement for
business units is brightness. They sacrifice other performance parameters to
achieve this. Home theater projectors need extremely accurate color rendition,
accurate grey scale tracking, deep blacks, and freedom from motion artifacts.
Plasma:
Advantages - They’re thin! Only 3 to 4 inches thick.
- They look great when displaying HDTV. (most of them)
Disadvantages - They can suffer image burn-in when displaying static images. Many retailers
and manufactures downplay the dangers, but the phenomenon occurs with many
different units. Do not leave the cable or DSS menu screen up for an hour or
two. Be careful when displaying HTPC or computer game video with static images.
- Many of them look really bad when displaying non HD TV. This problem has
lessened with improved internal video processing and scaling technology. Some
plasmas actually look pretty good with a better quality DVD feed.
- Many plasmas suffer from rather severe image artifacts although this is also
improving greatly due to the better internal processing.
- Some plasma displays have high power consumption. (Can be three times that of
a standard tube TV)
LCD flat panel:
Advantages - They’re thin! Some are only three inches thick.
- They have no image burn problems like plasmas do.
- Good picture on most newer sets.
- Long life (50,000 – 60,000 hours)
- You can get a true, 1080P native resolution display.
Disadvantages - Sizes over 30 inches are priced above equivalent sized plasma displays.
- The older units don’t have picture quality as good as plasma displays.
- Black and dark reproduction is not as good as plasma yet.
Rear Projection TV can be either digital or CRT based. The CRT units are going
away fast as consumers move to thinner, lighter digital rear projection TVs. At
this point, the better CRT rear projection sets offer fantastic performance for
the money. You can get a 50+” HDTV ready CRT set from good companies such as
Panasonic and Sony for under $1,500. These bargains will be gone soon as
production of CRT rear projection sets stops. Panasonic has indicated the 2005
model year will be their last for CRT RPTVs.
The disadvantage to CRT rear projection TVs is size and weight. They too will
suffer image burn problems if left with a static image for too long. They
require accurate convergence to look their best. Most newer units offer
multi-point convergence adjustments to facilitate this.
There are some new types of flat panel displays that will be released for
consumer use soon including Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) and SED. These
promise even better image quality than either LCD or plasma when fully
developed, in addition to lower cost, thinner profiles and much lower power
consumption.
In a nutshell:
Front Projection – Large image, can have spectacular picture quality even on a
huge screen – More difficult to set up, need to place the projector in the center of the room somewhere, noisy(some), must use better quality sources to
get the most benefit.
Plasma – cool factor, thin, look good for HDTV – Image burn problems, can
sometimes have a mediocre picture for all but HDTV sources
LCD - cool factor, thin, look good for HDTV, no Image burn problems, - Expensive
for larger sizes, can sometimes have a mediocre picture for all but HDTV
sources.
There are many display technologies available today. No one display is best for
all situations. Select the one that best fits your select your specific
requirements.
About the author
Steve Faber has almost 15 years in the custom installation industry. He
is a CEDIA certified designer and Installer 2 with certifications from
both the ISF and THX. His experience spans many facets of the industry,
from the trenches as an installer and control systems programmer, and
system designer, to a business unit director for a specialty importer of
high end audio video equipment, a sales rep for a large, regional
consumer electronics distributor, and principal of a $1.5M+ custom
installation firm. Steve is currently is senior sales engineer for
Digital Cinema Design, a CEDIA member firm in Redmond, WA. See more
great information about choosing the video display for your home theater
and more at: Home Theater Video. Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Steve_Faber. |
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