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  3. Plasma TV (and the death of projectors)

Plasma TV (and the death of projectors)

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • C Christopher Duncan

    When I built this house, I set up a media room with a 70" projector screen with a short throw (10 ft), so the picture was big and the quality acceptable. I've replaced two bulbs thus far (not cheap: ~$300), and I can live with that. However, what they don't tell you is that these bulbs die with an explosive bang loud enough to make you think you're taking mortar fire. Quite exciting. Best of all, when the second one went, it spewed powdered glass across the room. Yep. Actual glass, fine as grains of sand on the beach, all over the couch, carpet, and had I been sitting there at that precise moment, me. Having replaced the bulp, the color wheel now makes a grinding, whining noise, no doubt from an internal coating of glass as well. To say that I'm through with projectors would be an exercise in understatement. So, looking at a large screen to hang on the wall. Looks like 65" is tops for plasma, and they've come down in price quite a bit since I bought the projector system (at the time the biggest screens were $8-10k). What's the thinking on large, wall mountable TV technology these days? I'm not sure what features to look for, or what pitfalls to avoid. I just want something that doesn't explode.

    Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Stuart Dootson
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    Christopher Duncan wrote:

    Looks like 65" is tops for plasma

    Ahem[^]

    Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p

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    • C Christopher Duncan

      When I built this house, I set up a media room with a 70" projector screen with a short throw (10 ft), so the picture was big and the quality acceptable. I've replaced two bulbs thus far (not cheap: ~$300), and I can live with that. However, what they don't tell you is that these bulbs die with an explosive bang loud enough to make you think you're taking mortar fire. Quite exciting. Best of all, when the second one went, it spewed powdered glass across the room. Yep. Actual glass, fine as grains of sand on the beach, all over the couch, carpet, and had I been sitting there at that precise moment, me. Having replaced the bulp, the color wheel now makes a grinding, whining noise, no doubt from an internal coating of glass as well. To say that I'm through with projectors would be an exercise in understatement. So, looking at a large screen to hang on the wall. Looks like 65" is tops for plasma, and they've come down in price quite a bit since I bought the projector system (at the time the biggest screens were $8-10k). What's the thinking on large, wall mountable TV technology these days? I'm not sure what features to look for, or what pitfalls to avoid. I just want something that doesn't explode.

      Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

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      B Offline
      B rad A
      wrote on last edited by
      #23

      I just recently purchased both an LCD TV and a Plasma TV. The first thing you want to make sure is that it is full 1080p. The plasma does use more power and it also gets pretty warm compared to the LCD. For a larger TV I would suggest going with either an LCD or the new LED TV's as they will use less power and also not put out as much heat; but for the difference in price you may want to go with the plasma.

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      • C Christopher Duncan

        When I built this house, I set up a media room with a 70" projector screen with a short throw (10 ft), so the picture was big and the quality acceptable. I've replaced two bulbs thus far (not cheap: ~$300), and I can live with that. However, what they don't tell you is that these bulbs die with an explosive bang loud enough to make you think you're taking mortar fire. Quite exciting. Best of all, when the second one went, it spewed powdered glass across the room. Yep. Actual glass, fine as grains of sand on the beach, all over the couch, carpet, and had I been sitting there at that precise moment, me. Having replaced the bulp, the color wheel now makes a grinding, whining noise, no doubt from an internal coating of glass as well. To say that I'm through with projectors would be an exercise in understatement. So, looking at a large screen to hang on the wall. Looks like 65" is tops for plasma, and they've come down in price quite a bit since I bought the projector system (at the time the biggest screens were $8-10k). What's the thinking on large, wall mountable TV technology these days? I'm not sure what features to look for, or what pitfalls to avoid. I just want something that doesn't explode.

        Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

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        Dan Neely
        wrote on last edited by
        #24

        Christopher Duncan wrote:

        Best of all, when the second one went, it spewed powdered glass across the room. Yep. Actual glass, fine as grains of sand on the beach, all over the couch, carpet, and had I been sitting there at that precise moment, me. Having replaced the bulp, the color wheel now makes a grinding, whining noise, no doubt from an internal coating of glass as well.

        Was were the bulbs past their maximum number of design hours? You're supposed to replace them when they hit their design lifetime hours (the projector should keep track of this) instead of waiting until they fail because they're operating at a high enough power that, as you discovered, they can take the projector with them when they catastrophically fail. IIRC the problem is that to get a better color balance from the light (and what ends up being projected) they have to use bulbs that operate at significantly higher temperatures than a normal incandescent bulb.

        The latest nation. Procrastination.

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        • M merridus

          Christopher Duncan wrote:

          what they don't tell you is that these bulbs die with an explosive bang loud enough to make you think you're taking mortar fire.

          Is this common or does it happen only in certain conditions? Depending on bulb quality or environment in the room, things like that. Best warn my brother just in case though, his has been in place for a year or so now.

          - Rob

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          Dan Neely
          wrote on last edited by
          #25

          See my post downthread. If you replace the bulbs when you're supposed to instead of waiting until they die they shouldn't go boom.

          The latest nation. Procrastination.

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          • S Stuart Dootson

            Christopher Duncan wrote:

            Looks like 65" is tops for plasma

            Ahem[^]

            Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p

            C Offline
            C Offline
            Christopher Duncan
            wrote on last edited by
            #26

            :-D ...must ...hide ...credit cards...

            Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

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            • C Christopher Duncan

              This was an InFocus projector, and it happened 2 for 2 on the bulbs. Only the second explosion caused powdered glass, but once is enough for me. Can't speak to any other brands.

              Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

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              ragnaroknrol
              wrote on last edited by
              #27

              I can attest to this. We had a teacher almost have a heart attack due to one of these going while she was doing a presentation in a lab. 2 students were showered with the dust. Not a happy day for our IT director who had to explain why his projectors were suddenly time bombs. It happened again the next week (that one gave a grade school kid nightmares) and I quietly replaced every bulb the week after that on all the remaining projectors of that shipment. I wonder if any of them remember all this. Heh, might be fun in that place soon since I figure they will start going in November.

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              • R ragnaroknrol

                I can attest to this. We had a teacher almost have a heart attack due to one of these going while she was doing a presentation in a lab. 2 students were showered with the dust. Not a happy day for our IT director who had to explain why his projectors were suddenly time bombs. It happened again the next week (that one gave a grade school kid nightmares) and I quietly replaced every bulb the week after that on all the remaining projectors of that shipment. I wonder if any of them remember all this. Heh, might be fun in that place soon since I figure they will start going in November.

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                Dalek Dave
                wrote on last edited by
                #28

                I wired an Electrolytic Capacitor in backwards once, it was a big one too. The Boom from that was like a bomb going off.

                ------------------------------------ To eat well in England, you should have a breakfast three times a day. W. Somerset Maugham 1925

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                • H Harvey Saayman

                  Christopher Duncan wrote:

                  plasma

                  Christopher Duncan wrote:

                  what pitfalls to avoid

                  Avoid plasma screens, there's a reason they are much cheaper than LCD's. The quality as absolutely crap IMHO. And another thing, be sure to get an LCD that says "Full HD" instead of "HD ready"

                  Harvey Saayman - South Africa Software Developer .Net, C#, SQL you.suck = (you.Occupation == jobTitles.Programmer && you.Passion != Programming) 1000100 1101111 1100101 1110011 100000 1110100 1101000 1101001 1110011 100000 1101101 1100101 1100001 1101110 100000 1101001 1101101 100000 1100001 100000 1100111 1100101 1100101 1101011 111111

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                  ragnaroknrol
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #29

                  Yes, but in the winter that plasma tv lets you save on heating costs just by running it. ;)

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                  • S Shelby Robertson

                    I think mine is rated at 60,000 hours till half life. Which is over 6 years if you left it on 24 hours a day.

                    Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

                    Unpaid overtime is slavery.

                    Trollslayer wrote:

                    Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.

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                    R Offline
                    ragnaroknrol
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #30

                    Shelby Robetson wrote:

                    rated at 60,000 hours till half life

                    Why am I scared at the radioactivity of your tv set? With that short of a half life it has to be dangerous...

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                    • C Christopher Duncan

                      What's the difference between Plasma and LED technology?

                      Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #31

                      'LED' is LCD with LED backlighting instead of a cold cathode fluourescent lighting. It's still a transmissive display and whilst LED backlit LCDs are very good if you want GOOD colour plasma still wins.

                      Visit http://www.notreadytogiveup.com/[^] and do something special today.

                      S 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • H Harvey Saayman

                        Christopher Duncan wrote:

                        plasma

                        Christopher Duncan wrote:

                        what pitfalls to avoid

                        Avoid plasma screens, there's a reason they are much cheaper than LCD's. The quality as absolutely crap IMHO. And another thing, be sure to get an LCD that says "Full HD" instead of "HD ready"

                        Harvey Saayman - South Africa Software Developer .Net, C#, SQL you.suck = (you.Occupation == jobTitles.Programmer && you.Passion != Programming) 1000100 1101111 1100101 1110011 100000 1110100 1101000 1101001 1110011 100000 1101101 1100101 1100001 1101110 100000 1101001 1101101 100000 1100001 100000 1100111 1100101 1100101 1101011 111111

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #32

                        Harvey Saayman wrote:

                        there's a reason they are much cheaper than LCD's

                        Other way round. Wish I could afford a Panasonic VX100 :sigh: The Full HD bit is true.

                        Visit http://www.notreadytogiveup.com/[^] and do something special today.

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                        • C Christopher Duncan

                          :-D ...must ...hide ...credit cards...

                          Christopher Duncan www.PracticalUSA.com Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes Copywriting Services

                          G Offline
                          G Offline
                          Gary Wheeler
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #33

                          Bah. At 103 inches, each pixel's the size of a <choose_small_coin_in_your_local_currency>.

                          Software Zen: delete this;

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                          • G Gary Wheeler

                            Bah. At 103 inches, each pixel's the size of a <choose_small_coin_in_your_local_currency>.

                            Software Zen: delete this;

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            Dan Neely
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #34

                            I don't know what country you're living in; but I'm not aware of any that have coins slightly less than 2mm in diameter. :rolleyes:

                            The latest nation. Procrastination.

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                            • R ragnaroknrol

                              Shelby Robetson wrote:

                              rated at 60,000 hours till half life

                              Why am I scared at the radioactivity of your tv set? With that short of a half life it has to be dangerous...

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Shelby Robertson
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #35

                              sigh.:thumbsdown:

                              Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

                              Unpaid overtime is slavery.

                              Trollslayer wrote:

                              Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • D Dan Neely

                                I don't know what country you're living in; but I'm not aware of any that have coins slightly less than 2mm in diameter. :rolleyes:

                                The latest nation. Procrastination.

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                Gary Wheeler
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #36

                                Sigh. See here[^] and here[^].

                                Software Zen: delete this;

                                D 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • G Gary Wheeler

                                  Sigh. See here[^] and here[^].

                                  Software Zen: delete this;

                                  D Offline
                                  D Offline
                                  Dan Neely
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #37

                                  The same to you: from urban dictionary (may be NSFW)[^]

                                  The latest nation. Procrastination.

                                  G 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • D Dan Neely

                                    The same to you: from urban dictionary (may be NSFW)[^]

                                    The latest nation. Procrastination.

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    Gary Wheeler
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #38

                                    :laugh: I have a mug on my desk (a present from my daughter for Father's Day a couple years ago) with the caption "Professional smartass" on the side.

                                    Software Zen: delete this;

                                    D 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • H Harvey Saayman

                                      Christopher Duncan wrote:

                                      plasma

                                      Christopher Duncan wrote:

                                      what pitfalls to avoid

                                      Avoid plasma screens, there's a reason they are much cheaper than LCD's. The quality as absolutely crap IMHO. And another thing, be sure to get an LCD that says "Full HD" instead of "HD ready"

                                      Harvey Saayman - South Africa Software Developer .Net, C#, SQL you.suck = (you.Occupation == jobTitles.Programmer && you.Passion != Programming) 1000100 1101111 1100101 1110011 100000 1110100 1101000 1101001 1110011 100000 1101101 1100101 1100001 1101110 100000 1101001 1101101 100000 1100001 100000 1100111 1100101 1100101 1101011 111111

                                      D Offline
                                      D Offline
                                      DaveyM69
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #39

                                      Harvey Saayman wrote:

                                      be sure to get an LCD that says "Full HD" instead of "HD ready"

                                      I agree because I watch a lot of HD programming/Blue Ray disks/HD gaming but... ... if you watch non HD broadcast quality or standard DVDs (and don't own a XBox 360 or PS3) then you can get poorer visual performance on Full HD as it has to fill more missing pixels to fill the screen. For many people who rarely/never watch HD broadcast/recorded material etc, "HD ready" can be a better choice.

                                      Dave
                                      Generic BackgroundWorker - My latest article!
                                      BTW, in software, hope and pray is not a viable strategy. (Luc Pattyn)
                                      Why are you using VB6? Do you hate yourself? (Christian Graus)

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • H hairy_hats

                                        Has the super-size TV set become an object of vulgarity?[^]

                                        I hope you realise that hamsters are very creative when it comes to revenge. - Elaine

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                                        Joe Woodbury
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #40

                                        That article cracked me up. I thought it would be a polemic on the consumer culture; instead it was interior designers whining (probably the same people who fill rooms with gauche furniture without regard to use.)

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                                        • J Joe Woodbury

                                          That article cracked me up. I thought it would be a polemic on the consumer culture; instead it was interior designers whining (probably the same people who fill rooms with gauche furniture without regard to use.)

                                          D Offline
                                          D Offline
                                          Dan Neely
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #41

                                          And at that interior designers have much worse things to be pitching fits over. My sister's friend does it for people with stupidly much money (her record is $100k for a stove) who'll blow $10k on a Lucite bed frame. For those of you not in the know, Lucite is a different band name for the same thing as Plexiglass; what rednecks use to fix broken windows. :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

                                          The latest nation. Procrastination.

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