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I'm in the market to replace my Panasonic PZ85 series plasma because it's not bright enough for my family room during certain parts of the day, even if I close the curtains. I'd like to replace it with another Panasonic, but only if the newer ones are brighter than mine. I'd rather not get an LCD/LED because I don't like the picture quality compared with plasma, but that may be my only choice. I've looked at TVs in a couple of stores but since they crank up the picture a lot more than I would at home, it's hard to tell if they're bright enough.
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With locally dimming full array.
You will save a ton of electricity and keep the room cool in summer.
We'll have to agree to disagree about global warming until the next global cooling scare comes along
Agreed. The new Sony XBR local DIM LED LCDs surpasses Plasma in color contrasts. Also LCDs will always yield a cleaner picture vs. Plasma.
While the XBR LEDs are very good, it still doesnt seem as lifelike as plasma. We have a Sony XBR-46HX929 in the kids playroom. We wanted LCD/LED there for game use (no burn-in). We got the Sony because it was the best of that technology we could find, but watching movies on it still doesnt satisfy like plasma, so we usually go to the Panasonic for serious movie watching. The XBR is a nice set, though.
If he is used to plasma, he will not be happy with the image quality of an LED set. Although there have been improvements in LCD/LED sets, plasma keeps improving as well. Still the best image quality. The heating myth is way overblown, as any plasma owner knows.
I tried the "hand test"
Went to several stores and placed my hand on the top rear of the big screens. Plasmas really pumped out the heat. You can feel a breeze of hot air raising from them. LCD's are much better, just a bit of a flow of warm air. LED's have virtually no warm air flowing out from them.
We'll have to agree to disagree about global warming until the next global cooling scare comes along
Note I didnt say plasmas didnt generate heat, I said it was way overblown. Yes, I can feel heat if I stick my hand over the screen, but in real use, it has never been the slightest problem. I feel it is a small price to pay for the picture quality.
My Panasonic plasma has fans on the back, but the air coming from them never feel any warmer than room temp. Probably is slightly warmer than room temp though, since moving air aways feels cooler. The top of my CRT computer monitor feels warmer.
Uhh, it's been eleven years since the twentieth century.
; <)
We'll have to agree to disagree about global warming until the next global cooling scare comes along
So that means we throw away something that works great?
Agreed, the heating problem is overblown and my three Panasonic Viera plasmas are very bright. None of them heats up the room they are in either.
-Wendell
I thought it was a bit of an overblown myth too. Not anymore, not after the past summer. I had to splurge and put a $15 fan in my viewing room. Had to crank the vol a tad more to compensate...
It will be nice in the winter, which frankly is all-round good for plasma owners, because it gets dark earlier and that's when you want to watch the plasma...when it's dark. So you're watching more, and getting heated. Plus a nice piccy. Plasma for the winter, LED for the summer. If it's warm all the time where you are, you probably have a better cooling setup than most here have, so definitely plasma if you're fussy enough to notice the diff.
Well, we are in the central valley of California, where summer temps typically run from the mid 90's on good days, to 105 or more on hot days. AC is the norm for us.
I bought a Panny 50G25 last November and the picture is plenty bright during the day even in THX mode. I used the Home Theater Magazine recommended settings. Good luck.
Tubes and vinyl are preferred.
Cheers, Jeff
Hmmm. I've never heard of this complaint w/ a plasma or any other type of display. You can't adjust the picture to make it they way you want it to look?
I'll agree that any TV in a bright room will never look as good as in a darkened room, but my 4.5 year old Panasonic plasma is still the best TV I've seen, regardless of how light the room is.
Doug
As I said, I'd prefer to replace it with a new Panasonic if they're brighter than the one I have.
All I know is our 50" Panasonic is capable of far brighter images than we run it at. Our family room can get pretty bright in the mid afternoon with the sun coming in through the windows and sliding glass door, but we don't run it at full brightness (I have it calibrated). Wouldn't trade its image quality for anything.
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