How Plasma TVs And LCD TVs Differ
by: Joseph Foley
The buying of large-screen TVs has absolutely skyrocketed
lately. It seems that everyone wants one – and with good
reason. The
large-screen TV has come a long way from those faded-out behemoths of
old that took up half your living room and never really produced a
picture of decent quality. Now, however, especially in combination with
HDTV, you can get not only a nice, large picture, but a crisp, clean
one too.
Once you decide that you’re ready for a large-screen
TV, you
quickly discover that you only really have two main options –
a plasma
TV or an LCD TV. Plasma TVs were first on the scene, but the recent
mass production of LCD TVs by major manufactures has put LCD TVs pretty
much on equal footing with plasmas. That said, you will still have to
make a choice.
If you’re like most people, you not only have no
idea how the
two differ, you don’t even know the areas you should be
considering in
order to determine how they differ. But they do indeed differ, and
knowing the difference is extremely important if you’re going
to get
the TV that’s right for you.
You can essentially boil the differences between plasmas and
LCDs into twelve basic points. In some areas, plasmas will win out. In
other areas, LCDs will win out. In yet other areas, it will depend on
your own personal taste in order to decide who wins out.
The twelve ways plasma TVs and LCD TVs differ are the
following:
1. The first is a technical issue, and may seem a little
boring,
but it really does affect other areas. Plasmas TVs are made of chemical
compounds called phosphors. LCD TVs use millions of liquid crystals.
2. The next section is related to how big the TVs are and the
availability of larger sizes. You have a wider selection of larger-size
TVs with plasmas (though LCDs are catching up).
3. The next section is “small size,” which
is also important.
Plasmas don't come in smaller sizes, which you will need for places
like the kitchen.
4. Next is viewing angle. Plasmas tend to have a wider viewing
angle (though, again, LCDs are catching up).
5. Although the manufacturers may not like to admit it, each
“can” suffer from certain problems. Plasmas can
suffer from burn-in
effect; LCDs don't.
6. Another problem area, but for LCDs, is
“delay.” LCDs can
produce a jagged figure when in motion. Plasmas tend to do better. HDTV
improves this dramatically for both.
7. The next area is life span. You can replace the light
source
with an LCD, thereby bringing your original picture back. With plasmas
you can't.
8. In the next few sections, the theme of “picture
quality” is
considered. First, color: LCDs produce sharp, lively colors. Plasmas
produce warmer and more accurate colors.
9. Next is brightness levels and the TVs ability to handle
different lighting. LCDs tend to do better in bright-light conditions.
10. Also related to picture quality is “black
levels.” Plasmas tend to produce blacker blacks.
11. Another area to consider is contrast range. Plasmas,
"technically," produce a higher contrast range.
12. Last, and certainly not least, is price. At the moment,
plasmas tend to run a little cheaper, but this is changing rapidly as
LCDs flood into the market. By the time you read this, in fact, there
may be no difference at all.
Essentially, which one is right for you will all comes down to
taste: What potential negatives will you not really notice? What
positives do you want more of? What do you really want the TV for
–
movies, sports, news, regular TV shows? Both plasmas and LCDs have
strong advocates in their corners. Both have deliriously happy
customers. But those happy customers are only happy because they knew
what they wanted before they made their purchase. If you want to make
the right choice, you’ll have to decide what it is you want
and which
of the two TVs can best give you that.
About The Author
Joseph Foley
Plasma vs. LCD TVs: To learn more about these two
technologies
and how your own personal tastes and viewing habits will affect your
choice, read the full report at http://www.plasma-vs-lcd.com.
You might also be surprised to learn that plasma TVs are like peanut
butter and LCD TVs are like jelly. Yes, really. Read the report.
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