Hi all,
I have a 46" Bravia, and it is the finest TV I've ever owned, and definitely not too small. The picture is simply awesome. I don't really get what you are saying when you point out that 90% of us with HDTVs aren't truly getting HDTV -- can you explain that? It sure looks like 1080 HD to me (except for when they don't really broadcast in 1080). A lot of stations say they are in HD, but they really aren't and there is nothing we can do about that, right? That said, when something IS broadcast in 1080, the difference is night and day.
Thanks,
Vicki
Sony Bravia Video Engines
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Richard
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Viewing distance is everything if you want to be able to actually see all that resolution. Most people are sitting too far away. Beyond five screen heights you will have difficulty making out a 1920 line pattern and that means you are not really seeing 1920.I don't really get what you are saying when you point out that 90% of us with HDTVs aren't truly getting HDTV -- can you explain that?
That also means there will be little difference between a 720P and a 1080P display at that viewing distance.
Regardless of viewing distance you will always get the HDTV advantage of a 16:9 aspect ratio or screen shape, better color and far less video artifacts/errors.
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contavespi
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Gotcha! Then I'm doing just fine as I'm sitting no more then 10 feet away. The picture ROCKS, especially on sports. Seeing individual people all the way across a stadium is pretty amazing. I have had the TV for about 3 months, and am still in the shock and awe stage sometimes! Thank you for your reply.
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Richard
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pmalter0
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Vicki: the problem is that your Bravia is probably too good. If you sit more than 6' away, you can't see all the detail it can produce. At more than 11' you can't even see HD resolution. Compare an HD picture with a over-the-air non HD digital picture(NOT a cable non HD--they're compressed to below NTSC standards) and you won't be able to see the difference at more than 11".[/b]