Find in this Blog

Senin, 15 Februari 2010

Differences between LCD and plasma TV

There are some differences between LCD TV and Plasma TV. Lets us brief the differences.

Liquid Crystal Display / LCD TV

LCD TV - Liquid crystal display panel basically consists of an arrangement of pixels that are filled with liquid crystals that is placed in front of a backlight (typically cold cathode fluorescent lamps). The liquid crystals regulate the light that passes through the panel when current is passed, resulting in brilliant images.

Plasma TV

A plasma TV employ phosphors for emitting light. Fundamentally, plasma TV displays consist of an array of tiny cells (pixels) that are compiled of three sub-pixels for the primary colours namely, red, green and blue. The term 'plasma' arises from the fact that gas in plasma state is made to react with phosphors, thereby producing images.


LCD TV vs Plasma TV - Screen size

LCD TV now offers the widest-array of screen-sizes, but for many years huge 37-, 42- and even 50-inch plasma TVs were the only choice for fans of big-screen TV. Technology restricted LCD TVs to small portable sets and the 32-inch market.

Today, it's a different story. Massive manufacturer investment in research and production has led to LCD TV screens becoming increasingly bigger.

Many manufacturers have abandoned plasma altogether (such as Sony, Sharp, Toshiba), and LCD screens are now common in the 40-inch plus category.


LCD TV vs Plasma TV - Picture quality

The very latest LCD TVs often have the edge over plasma

The million-dollar question – which flat-panel TV technology actually looks better on the screen?

There are a couple of general observations to be made; many LCD TVs don't do blacks well, so darker pictures can look washed out, and plasma TVs typically have wider viewing angles.

But in reality the issue is less to do with the hardware and far more to do with the digital processing software inside the TV.

Both LCD and plasma TVs have to upscale and de-interlace TV pictures, and instead of scanning them directly onto the screen like a CRT television, they store pictures and place them onto the TV screen a frame at a time.

The quality of the digital processing software used to hide the side effects of all this, not the technology per se, will more often than not dictate the quality of the picture.

Having said that, LCD TVs have the definite edge over plasmas in the rigorous Which? testing regime, and find most favour with our exacting viewing panel. However, if you take screen size into account, this is hardly surprising.

A 26 to 32-inch screen is the optimal size for watching standard-definition material. Bigger screens tend to make digital processing side-effects more obvious.

Conversely, bigger screens are more suited to high definition. A 42-inch screen is more capable than a 26-inch set, for instance, of showing off the extra detail and sharpness of a HD picture.

Considering most of us watch standard-definition TV, LCD is more often than not the technology of choice. In larger screen sizes, Sony and Toshiba LCDs vie with Panasonic and Pioneer plasmas for top spot.

See detailed brand overviews for the lowdown on all the leading TV manufacturers.

LCD TV vs Plasma TV - Power consumption

Plasma TVs use more power than LCD TVs

Based on our test results, a 42-inch plasma TV typically uses 277 watts when switched on, compared to an 180 watt average for the 40-46-inch LCD TV category. That's 50% less energy than plasma televisions.

However, some TV manufacturers point out that the power use of a plasma television is directly dependent on picture brightness, while an LCD TV picture requires a constant source of illumination. The theory goes that a plasma TV should use less power over time.

But, in reality, plasma TVs require significantly more power to achieve the same brightness level as an LCD TV, putting something of a 42-inch widescreen hole in the theory.

See our guide to how to use less electricity for some energy saving tips, or check out our guide to energy saving appliances.


LCD TV vs Plasma TV - Versatility

Both LCD and plasma TVs can be wall-mounted. However, wall-mounting kits usually cost extra and cost more the bigger the TV.

Plasmas weigh a lot more than LCDs (even those of comparable screen size), so setting them up or moving around could prove problematic.

Cost of LCD TV and Plasma TV

Prices have plummeted for LCD and plasma TVs in general, and cost is now much less of an issue than it was. LCD TVs tend to be cheaper, purely because of a smaller average screen size.

However, good 42-inch plasma TVs for less than £800 are now easy to come by. Prices for comparable screen sizes are now pretty similar.

Tidak ada komentar: