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If this is still available on Aug 31, I will buy this. That's the day I will be doing the house closing. I just wonder how heavy this is and if delivery will include setup. However major issue is lamp life which is typicaly 1000-1500 hours only. This translates to yearly change of the lamp which can be quite expensive. See LCOS.
Product Description If youre ready to move up to the highest quality large screen high-definition TV the 65-inch LCoS Olevia 565H HDTV is the ideal choice for home or business - packed with the industrys top technology and innovative Olevia-first features. Delivering best-in-class video and audio its heart is the 6-megapixel Brillian UltraContrast LCoS light engine. Three 1920x1080 pixel LCoS microdisplays each with 90% fill factor (or use of the active pixel area) 4ms response time and up to 4000:1 Sequential Contrast Ratio ensure that rainbow effects and screen-door appearance of alternative technologies are eliminated. Video processing is powered by state-of-the-art PixelWorks DNX (Digital Natural Expression) technology. Additionally the 565H features both DVI & HDMI inputs enabling support from 480i to 1080p content three digital/analog tuners (1-ATSC/2-NTSC) for over-the-air broadcast TV signals support for QAM Clear Digital Cable input plus a super-wide 170-degree viewing angle.Its rich set of video and audio connectors enable the Olevia 565H to display everything - high-definition digital broadcast and digital cable TV and widescreen movies (up to 1080p resolution) standard analog TV action sports video games and home videos - with stunningly crisp and vibrant imagery and realistic and immersive sound. This 65-inch HDTV can even double as a computer display with 1920x1080 resolution utilizing the VGA DVI or HDMI inputs. The 565H horizontal (or bottom) mounted speakers complement its D2 Audio surround sound audio processor which makes theater-quality digital audio part of this outstanding entertainment experience.
gerrond said:If this is still available on Aug 31, I will buy this. That's the day I will be doing the house closing. I just wonder how heavy this is and if delivery will include setup. However major issue is lamp life which is typicaly 1000-1500 hours only. This translates to yearly change of the lamp which can be quite expensive. See LCOS.
That 1000-1500 hour lamp life refers only to LCOS Projectors, not LCOS Televisions. There's no way any manufacturer would be able to get away with a television that needed repair once per year...
The 50" Olevia LCOS I have seen with a quoted 10,000 hour lamp life which at 3 hours per day comes out to almost 10 years.
Metric said:its big but rear projection is nearing its end.
I used to think that too until I saw the Sony SXRD LCOS televisions. Those are nicer IMO than a majority of the flat panels. As long as there is a price premium on flat panels the projection TVs will survive.
flight23 said:gerrond said:If this is still available on Aug 31, I will buy this. That's the day I will be doing the house closing. I just wonder how heavy this is and if delivery will include setup. However major issue is lamp life which is typicaly 1000-1500 hours only. This translates to yearly change of the lamp which can be quite expensive. See LCOS.
That 1000-1500 hour lamp life refers only to LCOS Projectors, not LCOS Televisions. There's no way any manufacturer would be able to get away with a television that needed repair once per year...
The 50" Olevia LCOS I have seen with a quoted 10,000 hour lamp life which at 3 hours per day comes out to almost 10 years.
Thanks for the correction. 10,000 hour lamp life is not bad though not as good as other technologies.
True, but plasma decreases in brightness over time. LCD is probably the best all around but still the most expensive.
Even at 8 hours per day this should last 4 years before bulb replacement and for most people 8 hours takes 3-4 days at least. I just wish I could see this TV in person somewhere.
flight23 said:True, but plasma decreases in brightness over time. LCD is probably the best all around but still the most expensive.
Even at 8 hours per day this should last 4 years before bulb replacement and for most people 8 hours takes 3-4 days at least. I just wish I could see this TV in person somewhere.
Actually, LCDs have a cold-cathode fluorescent light (CCFL) that degrades fairly quickly as well, and is not user-replaceable. The horribleness of CCFLs is a big reason that LED backlights are quickly becoming the norm in good laptops, and will probably be the norm in all LCDs given a couple years.
bobfather said:flight23 said:True, but plasma decreases in brightness over time. LCD is probably the best all around but still the most expensive.
Even at 8 hours per day this should last 4 years before bulb replacement and for most people 8 hours takes 3-4 days at least. I just wish I could see this TV in person somewhere.
Actually, LCDs have a cold-cathode fluorescent light (CCFL) that degrades fairly quickly as well, and is not user-replaceable. The horribleness of CCFLs is a big reason that LED backlights are quickly becoming the norm in good laptops, and will probably be the norm in all LCDs given a couple years.True. But, life span of TV does not really matter these days for fatwalleter. You will probably replace your TV with newer bigger TV in few years. You just can't pass the hot deals at FW. LOL
welphd said:looks like this syntax company comes out of nowhere to challenge big guys like sony, samsung.
syntax has been around for a good 4-5 years. I have the olevia 30" from them that I bought 4 years ago and to this day its still going great and I use it as my main computer monitor. for the price, you cant beat the performance
Metric said:its big but rear projection is nearing its end.
You've got that so wrong. Flat Panels of the same performance and size are so far outside of projection TV's price range. They will be around for a good long while.
flight23 said:gerrond said:If this is still available on Aug 31, I will buy this. That's the day I will be doing the house closing. I just wonder how heavy this is and if delivery will include setup. However major issue is lamp life which is typicaly 1000-1500 hours only. This translates to yearly change of the lamp which can be quite expensive. See LCOS.
That 1000-1500 hour lamp life refers only to LCOS Projectors, not LCOS Televisions. There's no way any manufacturer would be able to get away with a television that needed repair once per year...
The 50" Olevia LCOS I have seen with a quoted 10,000 hour lamp life which at 3 hours per day comes out to almost 10 years.
ONCE a year, heck, my DLP gets 6000+ hours a year, that would be one expensive TV if I had to change the bulb 4 times a year...
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