A Look at the Top Models in the HDTV Market

An HDTV should never be an impulse investment for the majority of us. Fortunately, it shouldn’t need to become an exercise in electrical engineering, either. While shopping for these HDTVs, it is particularly common for an average consumer to be overwhelmed by a deluge of alphabet soup, numbers and technical terms, particularly if you never knew very much concerning electronics. Some folks find that sort of techno-speak to be informative, but plenty consumers don’t. In order to address that problem, what follows is some helpful HDTV reviews that try to simply let you know how well the devices function, without being lost in the mysterious intricacies of how they really perform that task. Sony Bravia KDL-52XBR9 HDTV

Samsung UNB8500

This HDTV is tantalizingly close to attaining the impossible – being too rich and too thin. Samsung’s best product is priced at nearly $4000 and enjoys an ultraslim profile, making it today’s supermodel of HDTVs. Any flat panel screen is a stylish, compact appliance whether it works well or not. That specific flat-panel screen furthermore displays the most impressive picture quality available from an LCD screen this week. Because the model is a flat-panel LCD screen, though, the best spot for viewing is directly in front of the screen. If you are seated at an angle relative to the screen, you may have a rough time seeing the picture or the excuse for the price tag. Similar to this is TV is Sony Bravia KDL-46S5100 HDTV

Panasonic TC-P50V10

Panasonic’s best performing plasma HDTV actually gives us a more detailed video than Samsung’s top quality television reviewed above. Not surprisingly, this is owing to the fact that plasma screens usually display a picture better than LCD screens routinely. You can enjoy the high-definition video from several angles rather than being stuck directly in front of the flat screen. The picture you are enjoying is higher quality, as well, because rather than being made up of pixels, or very small squares, the picture gels together as if it were being translated inside liquid, which it is. It’s possible that just the most particular videophiles will ever worry about that difference, so why should your average consumer be interested? Perhaps because the TC-P50V10 plasma TV costs around $2000 less than Samsung’s piece of video nirvana.

Sharp AQUOS LC-32D62U

Sharp also has a impressive representative in the monster-sized, many-pixel competition. It comes with a high-resolution LCD screen which offers remarkably clear visuals when you sit at an angle from the screen, not merely when you are trapped directly in front of it. This HDTV is very versatile since it includes two attatched HDMI converters, which allow you to use peripherals including DVD players which are not yet HDTV compatible. It also has another two HD component inputs, in case you may be upgrading all the toys at once, and would like to connect it all right now. Sharp’s widescreen wonder includes one more attractive feature: its sales price of less than $1200 keeps it almost affordable when you consider our two other reviewed products.

You’ll find many different well-made HDTVs for sale at the moment, and they are available in sizes and prices to fulfill anyone’s wants. The key questions for most of us to concentrate on is what we seriously want and how much we are able to pay for it. Happy shopping! Sony Bravia HDTV’s

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