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The core of a home theater system

Posted on : 03-05-2010 | By : G'Fox | In : Review Vizio HDTV

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A first wide-screen display: Please note that we do not say, television. Increasingly looks like a TV receiver is separated from the display aspect, the source devices such as set-top box, an external TV tuner, computer and more. Rightly, the display is optimized for its primary mission – to show the wide variety of video output from a home theater system. These screens can be very important. There is talk of more than 120 inches diagonal, which is 10 meters for those of you whodo the math!

A second source of digital video: At least, this means that a DVD player, and for most people, is also a source of TV (digital cable or digital satellite television services). We believe DVD is a must-have bottom-line "if you build a house, because the theater, such as access to many of us to the movies, we want to see. For most people, including a source digital video source ( or sources) of high definition television or HDTV videodegree.

A third surround sound and you can read the details of surround sound in a few pages, but you have surround sound to the full realization of all power amplifier audio of your DVD. With surround sound, you really start to imitate the theatrical experience.

Missing one of those who are not really a movie at home. Without display and surround sound, you lose the effect of visual and audio experience, and without a digital videoSource, just a system for HDTV and large. You really need all three.

Mitsubishi WD-60C9 60-Inch 1080p Flat panel DLP Home Theater

Posted on : 14-01-2010 | By : G'Fox | In : Mitsubishi TVs

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Cheap Mitsubishi WD-60C9 60-Inch 1080p Flat panel DLP Home Theater WD-60C9

Paid 0 for this tv on sale and it was money well spent on a tv. I am very satisfied. The tv recognizes devices like my Samsung dvd and switches automatically to dvd mode when I switch the dvd on. Even the dvd section of the tv remote works with my Samsung dvd player(play,sop, pause only). My vcr is old and the tv does not switch to this mode when I turn it on. There is a built in digital channel tuner so you don’t need a box to receive local digital channels. Resolution is great (don’t sit 3ft from tv where you can see every little detail). I don’t have hd cable or bluray but the quality (resolution) of what I see is great even on videotapes. I think the tv upscales images to 720p/1080p or tries to. I wish this tv had a pc mode and that the usb port was for more than upgrading software as the higher models (837 series I think) have. TV is about a foot deep, speaker sound is crisp, night scenes and shadows can be off a bit (remember I don’t have hd cable or bluray) where the dark areas look pixilated and action scenes blurry but this may have to with movie itself instead of the tv as most dark scenes look great in the movies I saw except for two movies. Elmo’s world from VCR looks superb, and LOTR on dvd looked amazing but Terminator Salvation on dvd did not look good. The only thing I could think of is that some filmmakers use better recording equipment than others.

If I paid 200 more I would still think I got a good deal. Can’t beat that 60″ screen.

Average Rating

Product Description

With picture perfomance that outpaces today’s smaller flat panels, Mitsubishi Home Theater TVs offer a larger than life, intensely vivid viewing experience. In screen sizes ranging from 60 to 82 Inches, Mitsubishi Home Theater TV’s define the large screeen entertainment category by offering incomparable value and stronger performance than smaller flat panel televisions!

  • Smooth 120Hz
  • Exclusive 6-Color Processor
  • Plush 1080p 5G Improved 12-bit Processing
  • 3D Ready – 3D video, gaming and dual-screen features require compatible 3D source devices, 3D glasses and IR emitters
  • Improved Video Noise Reduction

I am now spoiled by home theater. – Ken – Denver, CO
This was my first big screen/HDTV purchase. I have it hooked up to my computer via HDMI to DVI cable which you should definitely BUY AT AMAZON – in store will try to charge ~!! My uses are an internal BD reader/writer for the PC and use it for my internet based streaming video flix account – for these uses I can verify it rocks! I am blown away by the fact that this is the smallest in the series and still 8″ more diag. than one of the 52″ LCDs for about 0 less AND 3D ready ^_^. Definely great bang for the buck! I highly recommend hooking it up to some type of stereo or surround system to complete the home theater experience. FYI that in full 1080p for the PC the adjustments for the screen size need to be reduced via video card software – still bigger than a 52″ though ;)

Mitsubishi WD-73837 73-Inch 1080p 120Hz Home Theater DLP HDTV

Posted on : 08-01-2010 | By : G'Fox | In : Mitsubishi TVs

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Cheap Mitsubishi WD-73837 73-Inch 1080p 120Hz Home Theater DLP HDTV WD-73837

 

This TV was a replacement for a 62″ Toshiba HDTV from late 2005. The Toshiba had been calibrated using a DVD calibration disc (and the color filters that come with the DVD) fed into the component video inputs.

First of all, 73″ is a dramatic step up from just about anything you may have seen short of a front projection set up (Mitsu, however, now goes even one larger, 82″, if you have the living room real estate.) It is about 1″ less deep than the outgoing Toshiba — but this means it will require at least 12″ more distance from the wall (or whatever is behind it) behind it than “flat screen” HDTVs which usually require 3″ to 6″ of rear clearance. In our case the 73837 is in a large family room and it does not eat up an objectionable amount of real estate.

Second, the “super thin” frame and very low base, make the TV, when off, not overwhelm the room the way the Toshiba with its side speakers and high base seemed to do.

Third, the picture, out of the box is bad, correction, not just bad, it was horrible. It is set to a preference called “Brilliant.” This setting should be called “blaring,” or “blooming” or “garish” — it is so over-bright, over-blue and over-saturated it is unbearable — but fear not.

Fourth, the screen is non-reflective, meaning that you can watch this TV with the lights on in the room, although I can’t imagine seriously watching this “Theater” with ambient room lighting anything much over “way dim.” The 73837 is, however, plenty bright enough, even with the lights on.

When the set was delivered, all that was done by the deliverer was to be taken out of the box and set up on the stand where the Toshiba had been. I had to make the connections — and, in my case, since I use composite video for the set up OSD for my Proceed AVP, and component video from DirecTV and my HD disc player due to the long length of my cable runs, I had to look up the proper way to plug it in since it is not entirely intuitive. If you use HDMI or only component you should not have any issues, however. S-Video is officially dead, BTW. I’d skip composite video altogether if at all possible.

The bad news, as noted, were the factory settings — abandon them entirely.

The good news, Mitsubishi has included extensive calibration setting capabilties — although the BASIC user’s manual that comes in the box is useless as far as actually calibrating the set is concerned (you can download a more complete version for free from Mitsu’s web site.) More good news, the set CAN BE CALIBRATED by “mere mortals” with one of the available DVD calibration discs on the market (there is even a Blu-Ray (HD) calibration disc; but, if you have one of the older SD calibration discs, I would see no reason to go out and buy a new HD version, since they are virtually identical.

Allow a couple of hours+ for the set-up process and give the TV at least an hour at room temperature before turning it on, especially if you take delivery on a cold wintry day like I did. After “assuming room temperature,” turn the TV on and allow at least another half an hour for “stabilization” of the “light engine” (mainly the bulb.)

You will have to use several of the menus (across the top and down the left side) that can be selected by pressing the Menu button (on the otherwise crummy, not back lit, remote) for the set up process. The menu that you will spend the most time with is called “Picture+” and you will then need to go to the “Advanced Picture Sub-Menu” for the work that will follow.

The first thing you will want to do is make certain ALL of the “special” software picture enhancers are turned off (e.g., Deep Field Imager, Super Resolution, Sharp Edge, Video Noise, etc.) You will, in the event that you do not have a calibration disc, need, first and foremost to turn down the brightness and contrast a few notches and set the Gamma control to 2.2, and the sharpness control no higher than 10 (zero or anything in between is also OK.) You may want to adjust “Color,” (a notch or so lower) I found the factory setting for “Tint” to be fine.

There are literally dozens of other settings that can be adjusted, and/but, to do it right you will need the “name here” calibration DVD or Blu-Ray disc (I used Digital Video Essentials DVD, in SD, FWIW.)

You should set — from the Global Menu — film mode to “Auto,” and from the energy menu (accessed from the left side vertical menu) you should set the lamp mode to “Standard.” You can also set the clock and even turn on and off the center Blue Glow on the front of the cabinet. After trying it both ways, I left the Blue Glow in the “on” position — you may prefer otherwise. Make sure you turn Smooth 120Hz off, too or you may find the picture looks a bit, er, “artificial.”

When you are watching the set, make certain to press the “More” button on the remote and then follow it with the “Video” button (there will be an on screen prompt), choose the “Standard” setting and the Mitsubishi will automatically track the format of the incoming signal, and it will not alter or distort the picutre (it will, indeed, show with a press of the “Info” button, that you are watching source material: 420p, 720p, 1080i, etc, “Standard.”) Remember by the time you do this, you will have already set film mode to Auto.

With respect to all the many, many other settings: With a calibration disc you can get this set to damn near perfect; and, even without a calibration disc, you can certainly improve on the factory settings — and Mitsubishi even gives you a High Def still image which one can assume contains “all the elements” you need to fine tune the settings “to your tastes.”

Or you can pony up about 0 and have the set professionally calibrated.

For the money, not to damn with faint praise, nothing else even comes close to this 73″ beauty (once it is calibrated) — and, frankly, even for more than double the money (which will almost certainly be for a much smaller TV) nothing else comes close to the picture of this TV.

Oh, one last thing, the speakers and “audio” are very close to if not actually, Total Crap. But, that, too, is personal.

Five+ stars.

 

Average Rating

Product Description

 

73″ screen (measured diagonally) * widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio * UltraThin Frame cabinet with high-gloss black finish * built-in digital (ATSC) and analog (NTSC) tuners for over-the-air TV broadcasts (antenna required) * built-in QAM cable TV tuner receives unscrambled programs without a set-top box (cable service required) * Smooth Picture 1080p DLP system (1920 x 1080 pixels) *

  • Smooth 120Hz Film Motion eliminates motion artifacts for smooth, crisp, fast and slow action content
  • x.v.Color delivers up to 80 percent more color than standard HDTV for breathtaking realism and vivid, natural color
  • Four HDMI inputs and three Component inputs; USB input for enjoying JPEG images and WMA/MP3 music files
  • Displays all images at 1080p; converts lower-resolution signals with Plush 1080p 5G technology
  • Energy Star 3.0 Qualified for high energy efficiency

Unbelievable Picture Resolution!!!!!!!!! – Stuart Ferreyra – Los Angeles, Ca
I bought my first Mitsubishi 65′ HD (rear projection) in 2002 when HD was barely taking off the ground here in the U.S. The light guns of the this TV were getting old and it was only able to work in 1080i not 1080p. During the 7 years, I have owned this TV, I never experienced any issue, so I decided to stick with Mitsubishi. In 2006, I was looking for a bigger TV, a 73′ unit, but the price was too high. I did a lot of research on DLP technology so I decided that as soon as the price was right I would buy one. I waited for 3 years and on Black Friday 2009, the Mitsubishi 73′ DLP was at a price I was comfortable with.

I have had the new 73′ DLP at home for almost 3 weeks now. The calibration process has been slow and it has taken a bit of getting used to the TV menu. I am a colorist in the film industry, so I am very picky about colors being reproduced accurately and I expected the TV to display the same quality picture and colors as my ,000 Sony monitor at the studio. Right out of the box I was extremely disappointed, the colors on this TV were horrible, I spent hours calibrating the colors and going through the TV’s menu. Two weeks later I realized that I was calibrating the TV to the HD TV signal, which is completely inconsistent in terms of color and quality from channel to channel and network to network. Last week, my third week with the TV, I decided to calibrate the monitor with some blu-ray DVDs and some high quality visuals from my studio. I spent another few hours painstakingly calibrating the monitor using the extensive range of calibration colors Mitsubishi has packed with this model, and what can I say? I am blown away!

When calibrated, the clarity and accuracy of the colors are unbelievable. The brightness and level of detail of the DLP processor is jaw dropping. It was a pain to calibrate the monitor, it has taken me endless hours of tweaking (that’s why Mitsubishi strongly advices to get the TV professionally calibrated – I just didn’t want to pay – I wanted the satisfaction of doing it myself) but now that the TV is calibrated I am EXTREMELY happy with the purchase. I have the TV hooked up to a Denon and Polk surround sound system. The difference in size from my older 65′ to the new 73′ is dramatic and the cinematic experience is just OUTSTANDING. The viewing distance ratio of where you sit on a movie theatre to the size of the silver screen is almost exactly the same as sitting 13 – 14 feet from your couch to this 73′ Mitsubishi DLP TV.

I know that this is not a very cheap TV, but I do think it is affordable. 4 years ago this TV tag price was over ,000; this year it dropped to ,399 and if you buy from Amazon or Cructhfiled add no tax, no shipping and possibly 24 months no interest. If you watch a lot of TV, like me, this TV is awesome, but if you have a blu-ray player and love to watch movies this TV will definitely exceed your wildest expectations. I GREATLY and STRONGLY recommend two things: 1) Buy this TV!!!; and 2) Either spend the time calibrating it to a quality video signal if you have the patience and the knowledge or get it professionally calibrated.

Once you do the two things above, you will be extremely happy and proud, yes proud, with your new DLP TV.

Stuart Ferreyra
Timecode Multimedia
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