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  1. #151
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Certainly more than you.
    I have forgotten more than you will ever know about CRT, never had a front projector,
    they were obsolete before I could scrape together the cash.
    I dont waste my time on buggy whips, 8 track tape players, or VCR's EITHER
    If you have never owned one, then how can you possibly comment on the picture quality? This means that all of your comments and comparisons are born out of complete ignorance, and lack of experience. Hardly credible in anyone's book. Your other comments are to justify your ignorance, and its usually better to not comment, than to put your ignorance out there.



    Its easy to get something under a thousand bucks that, while not "high end" is at least 95% of same.
    The rest of price range is chasing the elusive 5% that is left.
    I am happy with 95%, you can spend thousands on the other 5%
    If you have never purchased anything above $1000, then how do you know you get 95% of the performance of a above $1000 from a below $1000 product? This is nothing more than ignorant statements from an ignorant person. You don't know, so you just keep pulling these abstract numbers out of your a$$. You do this over and over, and its getting boring.


    Not just light output but lifespan, convienece, resolution, true picture q and other factors.
    Not to mention they dont make front projectors any more with CRT so the issue is MOOT
    How do you know, you have never owned a front projection CRT, you haven't even owned a front projection digital projector. More ignorance, and no fact. There is no way you can say resolution or true picture quality, that only comes with experience with the product, not just some guesses. There is no LCD, DLP, or ILA based consumer projector that can do 2000x2500 lines of information, that is a fact. Only professional projectors that cost over $60,000-$100,000 poses that kind of resolution. Digital projectors look digital because they sample and hold, rather than creating a sliver of blackness between frames just like theater projectors do, and camera do as well. So they can never exibit "true" picture quality until they do what the source does, create lines of blacks between frames.


    THERE IS NO SET "STANDARD" OF CONTRAST, BUT 1.000/1, WHILE THE BARE MINIUM IS ACCEPTABLE.
    You are wrong again. Joe Kane(remember him, you like to quote him at your convience) says the minimum acceptable contrast ratio for any display device is at least 20,000:1. That would put it in the same ballpark as professional projectors and cameras. 1000:1 is perfectly acceptable to a person trying to justify his cheapness, and his compromise for a lesser product that does not meet even minimal standards. SMPTE also uses the same standards as Joe Kane, so to say there is no "standard" is just your ignorance, and just shows that quality is not what you are after, only light output is your standard.


    WHAT A SHYSTER, you only started in with Joe Kane when I started quoting him.
    As for being good at "debating" the only "bate" you know about is masterbate
    You opened the door idiot, and I walked through. If you use Joe Kane for one thing, you have to use him for all things. What you cannot do is parse his information to suit your argument. That is what a true shyster is, a little lying cheat. You misquote him, twist his words, and quite frankly I do not think you do it purposely, but because you have no idea how to vet the information you read. When you make the claim you have forgotten more than I will ever know, make sure you have not forgotten the basics and the detail that supports the basics, which it appears you have.


    Sorry but you are what you are, suicide is a sin so you'll have to live with yourself
    What a stupid statement from a stupid person
    Sir Terrence

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  2. #152
    Rep points are my LIFE!! Groundbeef's Avatar
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    My wife and I stayed on Maui for 3 days on our Honeymoon, at the "Maui Prince". Nice hotel, I don't know if its still around.

    Took a Heli tour of the island, and saw the waterfalls, and such.

    Some of our best scuba diving was there also. Can't wait to go back, but that would involve getting a job. Started looking in Nov, still looking...

    Enjoy your trip. Don't ruin it by responding to pix.
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  3. #153
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Groundbeef

    Enjoy your trip. Don't ruin it by responding to pix.
    My guess is that he enjoys it.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

  4. #154
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    I know I do!

  5. #155
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    Tisk tisk tisk. Rich, I'd take your head out of that fence if I were you. I hear that some guys will,... well.... skip it.

    Good luck.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

  6. #156
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    I'll have a response for you GM as soon as I figure out what you're trying to say. I too have trouble sometimes reading between the lines...

  7. #157
    Forum Regular O'Shag's Avatar
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    [QUOTE=pixelthis
    Receivers serve most well because they dont know what they are missing, and the usually small size of a living room and the relative low vollumes used most of the time
    help also.
    for most a receiver is fine, but for sound with AUTHORITY you need real power.
    A Chevy P.O.S will get you to the walmart, but to win NASCAR you need to kick it with
    some real horsepower[/QUOTE]

    Very well said. The problem is that most folks tend to think their schtuff is just about as good as it gets. How wrong they are. The difference when feeding a speaker up to 1000watts of quality power as opposed to 200watts of receiver power is massive. Literally night and day. Its hard to tell people who have never experienced this. Power equals improvement in everything. Speed, control, soundstage, depth, sense of ease/ no compression, proper tone, instantaneous dynamic shifts and transients - all sounds like BS - until you hear it for yourself. The utter clarity that results means things sound a lot closer to the real thing. Of course the speaker is a major part of the equation too.

    Don't think that because high-sensitivity speakers can get by on 3 watts, they don't sound great on 600watts. JBLs speakers are rated over 100db sensitivity, yet they suggest that several 600watt amps (triamped) are used for their top speakers - why? Because the result will be zero distortion, absolute signal integrity. Bob Carver long ago ran some tests, and figured out that to accurately reproduce the sound of a pin dropping without any distortion required well over 600 watts!

    Another pet peave, I don't get people saying the B&W 800d nautilus series is a bad speaker or just average. I know that people who say this either haven't even heard it, or have been listening to the speaker being driven inadequatey or there is a problem somewhere. Granted it is a power hog, but given the right power, the Nautilus will, in most important performance parameters, outperform most speakers out there. Power is the key. That is why many of the best recording studios in the world use B&W - not because they look pretty, or because the B&W saleman wags his or her bum.

    Its important to have a realistic view of the world, because otherwise one is stuck in a 'nirvana' of ignorance and that is usually not a good thing. Our hobby doesn't mean that we have to have the best, but to know what the best can sound like, and then to strive as best we can to get close to it.

    Pix, much respect mate I do think you make a lot of sense on many of your posts - although you should go easy on JRyhmeammo as he was only trying to defend you. BoundGrief is fair game though - just kidding!
    Last edited by O'Shag; 04-24-2008 at 05:06 PM.

  8. #158
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Groundbeef
    My wife and I stayed on Maui for 3 days on our Honeymoon, at the "Maui Prince". Nice hotel, I don't know if its still around.

    Took a Heli tour of the island, and saw the waterfalls, and such.

    Some of our best scuba diving was there also. Can't wait to go back, but that would involve getting a job. Started looking in Nov, still looking...

    Enjoy your trip. Don't ruin it by responding to pix.

    WHAT do you mean "respond to pix"

    I am the one that is responding to him
    THIS IDIOT ACTUALLY THINKS THAT IF YOU DONT HAVE SOMETHING
    that isnt even manufactured anymore, (a sofa sized CRT front projector) then you are deficient in someway.
    If he wants to waste his money on crap fine, just dont dis my taste because I dont choose to spend a fortune on something that has to be refurbished because they dont make it anymore.
    Does my system have compromises? Sure,
    SO DOES HIS.
    Everybodies does, what he is implying is that his system is perfect, and hes actually stupid enough to think that there is such a thing.
    He just has a different set of compromises, a bigger set of compromises than I do.
    AS USUAL MILKSHAKE COW YOU HAVE IT BACKWARDS
    Do you agree with him that in order to have a decent system that you have to take an old CRT front projector, put hdmi in it (which would entail a new video bus) new tubes scavenged from somewhere, basically rebuild the thing, from the ground up, that is what hes saying, that thats the "bare minimum for a decent system.
    Whats actually happening is his massive ego has to be "special" in some way,
    He has the "best" and everything everybody else has sucks.
    The truth is that a five grand dlp or lcos front projector will do just as well and probably exceed his and throw in an extra 1,000 lumens to boot.
    Not to mention that his system will always be compromised because the spare parts will be deficent, nothing will be to factory spec because there is no factory, the HDMI is a frabrication itself.
    In other words he has no convientional "HT", he is an electronics hobbyist, his rig will require constant tinkering, and the average person wont even be able to operate it.
    Its a toy, not a convientional HT, I thought this site was to talk about real
    home theaters, stuff you could actually buy, his stuff belongs in the DIY section.
    And he belongs someplace where the thorazine flows like tapwater
    LG 42", integra 6.9, B&W 602s2, CC6 center, dm305rears, b&w
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  9. #159
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by O'Shag
    Very well said. The problem is that most folks tend to think their schtuff is just about as good as it gets. How wrong they are. The difference when feeding a speaker up to 1000watts of quality power as opposed to 200watts of receiver power is massive. Literally night and day. Its hard to tell people who have never experienced this. Power equals improvement in everything. Speed, control, soundstage, depth, sense of ease/ no compression, proper tone, instantaneous dynamic shifts and transients - all sounds like BS - until you hear it for yourself. The utter clarity that results means things sound a lot closer to the real thing. Of course the speaker is a major part of the equation too.

    Don't think that because high-sensitivity speakers can get by on 3 watts, they don't sound great on 600watts. JBLs speakers are rated over 100db sensitivity, yet they suggest that several 600watt amps (triamped) are used for their top speakers - why? Because the result will be zero distortion, absolute signal integrity. Bob Carver long ago ran some tests, and figured out that to accurately reproduce the sound of a pin dropping without any distortion required well over 600 watts!

    Another pet peave, I don't get people saying the B&W 800d nautilus series is a bad speaker or just average. I know that people who say this either haven't even heard it, or have been listening to the speaker being driven inadequatey or there is a problem somewhere. Granted it is a power hog, but given the right power, the Nautilus will, in most important performance parameters, outperform most speakers out there. Power is the key. That is why many of the best recording studios in the world use B&W - not because they look pretty, or because the B&W saleman wags his or her bum.

    Its important to have a realistic view of the world, because otherwise one is stuck in a 'nirvana' of ignorance and that is usually not a good thing. Our hobby doesn't mean that we have to have the best, but to know what the best can sound like, and then to strive as best we can to get close to it.

    Pix, much respect mate I do think you make a lot of sense on many of your posts - although you should go easy on JRyhmeammo as he was only trying to defend you. BoundGrief is fair game though - just kidding!

    glad someone gets what I am trying to say.
    I strive to make my system the best I CAN, BUT saving for retirement and daily expenses
    means that compromises will have to be made, this is the experience of most people.
    My vizio is fine for my needs, I prefer to concentrate on the audio side anyway,
    because of the law of diminishing returns I would have to spend an inordinate amout to get a substantial increase in performance.
    And we are curently going through a wave of improvement the likes of which I have never seen in fourty years of messing with this stuff..
    I WOULDNT SPEND FIVE OR TEN GRAND ON ANY kind of video display device, its likely to be obsolete before its served much time.
    But amps are pretty much established, and that is probably my next purchase,
    something with a damping factor higher than 40 .
    Thanks for the kind words anyway
    LG 42", integra 6.9, B&W 602s2, CC6 center, dm305rears, b&w
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  10. #160
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
    If you have never owned one, then how can you possibly comment on the picture quality? This means that all of your comments and comparisons are born out of complete ignorance, and lack of experience. Hardly credible in anyone's book. Your other comments are to justify your ignorance, and its usually better to not comment, than to put your ignorance out there.
    OH PLEASE, I spent three years learning about CRT tech as well as tv electronics,
    and like to think I HAVE KEPT UP a little at least.
    You know what people like about the new panels and projectors?
    THE BRIGHTNESS.
    This is very important to a lot of people, including me.
    You're comments about black level being a shade of gray in lcd panels is disingenious
    at best, blacks are a tad washed out when everythings turned up for room lighting, but
    this is why they have controls to adjust these levels when you dont need that much illumination. Black level is quite good under low light conditions, with teh backlight down
    The "perfect" black level people talk about in CRT displays comes at a high price.
    Dimness, burn in , and awkward size and weight, and a short lifespan.
    And I have had several devices cositing several thousand dollars BTY.
    my first HDTV was a 47in RPTV, in spite of an almost obsessive dilligence in keeping static images off of the screen and the contrast down to 50, burn in still occured.
    And you can only make a phosper dot so small, these "bleed" over from illuminated pixels
    to unlit ones, smaller pixels wont last as long (less phosper) etc.
    I know plenty about CRT, the 30,000 volts needed to drive one, their relative fragility,
    How much fun it is turning the yoke when its on, etc.
    That is why I dont have one, that is why MOST dont have one




    If you have never purchased anything above $1000, then how do you know you get 95% of the performance of a above $1000 from a below $1000 product? This is nothing more than ignorant statements from an ignorant person. You don't know, so you just keep pulling these abstract numbers out of your a$$. You do this over and over, and its getting boring.
    I'm sorry, I keep forgetting that your inability to understand abstracts borders on autistic.
    No one ever knows when the law of diminshing returns kicks in, but it does
    do so.
    And yes I have bought several devices costing well over a grand, allow for inflation and most cost that much.
    AND most were CRT based of course.
    My simple set goes at least 90% of the way, and exceeds your stuff in some areas,
    that these areas are in your words" unimportant" is convienent



    How do you know, you have never owned a front projection CRT, you haven't even owned a front projection digital projector. More ignorance, and no fact. There is no way you can say resolution or true picture quality, that only comes with experience with the product, not just some guesses. There is no LCD, DLP, or ILA based consumer projector that can do 2000x2500 lines of information, that is a fact. Only professional projectors that cost over $60,000-$100,000 poses that kind of resolution. Digital projectors look digital because they sample and hold, rather than creating a sliver of blackness between frames just like theater projectors do, and camera do as well. So they can never exibit "true" picture quality until they do what the source does, create lines of blacks between frames.

    WHAT a copout, I have never owned a Rousch Porsch either, but I can find the fuel in jection system, brakes, etc quite handily.
    A front projector is just an adapted RPTV, uses three tubes in primary colors to produce a color picture, hardly rocket science.
    The last real improvement was 9" tubes, then most saw the writing on the wall,
    mainly that CRT, which were never intended to be projection devices could never compete with mercury bulbs, which were designed to put out decent light



    You are wrong again. Joe Kane(remember him, you like to quote him at your convience) says the minimum acceptable contrast ratio for any display device is at least 20,000:1. That would put it in the same ballpark as professional projectors and cameras. 1000:1 is perfectly acceptable to a person trying to justify his cheapness, and his compromise for a lesser product that does not meet even minimal standards. SMPTE also uses the same standards as Joe Kane, so to say there is no "standard" is just your ignorance, and just shows that quality is not what you are after, only light output is your standard.
    Good old joe, I BOUGHT MY SET A YEAR AND A HALF AGO, 1,000/'1 was considered quite good for an LCD, although a compromise.
    Sets these days are capable of much more, but for serious watching I turn down the light on the set and contrast is improved a great deal.
    As for 20,000 to one contrast there are some higher end sets now that can acheive at least 10,000


    You opened the door idiot, and I walked through. If you use Joe Kane for one thing, you have to use him for all things. What you cannot do is parse his information to suit your argument. That is what a true shyster is, a little lying cheat. You misquote him, twist his words, and quite frankly I do not think you do it purposely, but because you have no idea how to vet the information you read. When you make the claim you have forgotten more than I will ever know, make sure you have not forgotten the basics and the detail that supports the basics, which it appears you have.
    I quote joe kane from widescreen review, and what he says about resolution and picture q
    contradicts almost everything you have to say so I WOULD BE CAREFULL QUOTING HIM


    What a stupid statement from a stupid person
    mY FAULT, THATS WHAT YOU GET TRYING TO TALK DOWN TO A NINNY WHO DOESNT EVEN UNDERSTAND the difference between a test bench and real world conditions.
    like the riverboat pilot SAMUEL CLEMENS said, "their are lies, damn lies, and statistics".
    the same could be said of test bench results.
    YOU KNOW ENOUGH, YOU CAN GET TEST GEAR TO JUMP THROUGH ALL KINDS OF HOOPS.
    The key question is real world performance, ease of use and availability.
    I have always tried to emphazise affordable , reliable, well performing gear that will allow the average person to experience the joy of this hobby.
    The stuff you have(or claim to have) has no relevance in the real world.
    Produce gear with those specs that the average person can use and purchase in the real world and you might have something, right now you have an expensive toy
    LG 42", integra 6.9, B&W 602s2, CC6 center, dm305rears, b&w
    sub asw2500
    Panny DVDA player
    sharp Aquos BLU player
    pronto remote, technics antique direct drive TT
    Samsung SACD/DVDA player
    emotiva upa-2 two channel amp

  11. #161
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    you are an absolute jerkoff. every one of your posts in the past has been how your piece of sh*t vizio LCD was better than any plasma on the market, doesnt weight as much, can't kill someone if it tips over, doesn't have killer gases inside it, blah blah blah, and now you state that you are making compromises because you are saving for retirement, and your Vizio is fine for your needs? what an a-hole.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    glad someone gets what I am trying to say.
    I strive to make my system the best I CAN, BUT saving for retirement and daily expenses
    means that compromises will have to be made, this is the experience of most people.
    My vizio is fine for my needs, I prefer to concentrate on the audio side anyway,
    because of the law of diminishing returns I would have to spend an inordinate amout to get a substantial increase in performance.
    And we are curently going through a wave of improvement the likes of which I have never seen in fourty years of messing with this stuff..
    I WOULDNT SPEND FIVE OR TEN GRAND ON ANY kind of video display device, its likely to be obsolete before its served much time.
    But amps are pretty much established, and that is probably my next purchase,
    something with a damping factor higher than 40 .
    Thanks for the kind words anyway

  12. #162
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    OH PLEASE, I spent three years learning about CRT tech as well as tv electronics,
    and like to think I HAVE KEPT UP a little at least.
    You can really tell its just a little Learning about it without hands on experience is useless. And when you were learning about it, CRT projection wasn't even around, so your experience and well as your education on this particular piece of equipment is NIL

    Thinking is terrible for you. You thinking is like telling somebody else to drink poison.



    You know what people like about the new panels and projectors?
    THE BRIGHTNESS.
    This is very important to a lot of people, including me.
    You're comments about black level being a shade of gray in lcd panels is disingenious
    at best, blacks are a tad washed out when everythings turned up for room lighting, but
    this is why they have controls to adjust these levels when you dont need that much illumination. Black level is quite good under low light conditions, with teh backlight down
    When a television is properly calibrated, its peak brightness level is irrelevant. What is relevant is that the projector or panel meets SMPTE standards of brightness on the screen when the calibration is done. So it really doesn't matter if the projector peak light output is 1300 lumens or 2500 lumens. Because you follow NO STANDARDS, you seem to enjoy posting compromise after unnecessary compromise which makes me understand you have not clue what a properly calibrated picture looks like. It is not something you can watch in a lit room. If you turn up the brightness to compensate for the light in the room, shadow detail is lost, and the blacks start turning grey. With LCD panel, even when the room is dark, it cannot acheive blacker than black which is crutial to acheiving proper greyscale, and getting the proper greyscale is crutial to every other parimeter one uses to acheive a good picture quality. The very idea that a LCD panel needs a bias light to acheive a decent contrast ratio shows that the technology at this point cannot compete with high end CRT's(does not matter if they don't make them anymore, you can still get them) which does not require any kind of band aid to acheive a contrast level that meets both SMPTE and Joe Kane's recommended level. And the reality is, even with the bias light, it still cannot meet the standards for contrast level. If we listen to your idiotic advice, picture quality would vary from set to set, and we once again would have a system that was NTSC, never twice the same color.

    So this whole brightness thing(when you take accurate picture quality into consideration) is a red herring if I ever saw one. Its one thing to understand how something works. its another to understand how something should be set up to produce an accurate picture. You say you know the former, but I know for sure you do not know the latter.


    The "perfect" black level people talk about in CRT displays comes at a high price.
    Dimness, burn in , and awkward size and weight, and a short lifespan.
    Once again more ignorance, and no fact. A properly calibrated CRT will never experience burn in. That is because the contrast level must be turned down quite a bit to acheive an accurate greyscale. Its the same for LCD, DLP, ILA and any other type of display device. Secondly, burn only occurs when the contrast ratio is set too high, and you display static images for a long time. If you are watching television programs and blurays(which have constantly moving images) and the contrast is properly set, how can this possible occur? Thirdly, a short CRT lifespan is a result of the contrast and brightness being up too high. When a CRT is properly calibrated, a CRT can last longer than any bulb in a panel. That is why you have CRT projection devices still around today some twenty years after its introduction. Yes they are large and awkard I will give you that. But anyone looking for real accurate images is not going to care one bit about that, just like a person who wants a VERY accurate extended range speaker will not care about the size of the cabinet in their listening rooms. What your low brow taste finds important, and what a person looking for a accurate picture quality finds important are polarly divergant.


    And I have had several devices cositing several thousand dollars BTY.
    my first HDTV was a 47in RPTV, in spite of an almost obsessive dilligence in keeping static images off of the screen and the contrast down to 50, burn in still occured.
    Which means that that display device was not properly calibrated, and/or was cheap in the first place. I have had RPTV's and projectors in my hometheater since the early nineties. Not one of them had any signs of burn in after more than fifteen years of daily usage. The projector I had before the G-90 was used just about everyday for fifteen years, it had very minimal wear on the CRT's from reproducing widescreen images, but absolutely nothing that would degrade performance. It is obvious to me that your contrast setting of 50 is not enough

    Your experience does not equal everyones experience.

    And you can only make a phosper dot so small, these "bleed" over from illuminated pixels
    to unlit ones, smaller pixels wont last as long (less phosper) etc.
    I know plenty about CRT, the 30,000 volts needed to drive one, their relative fragility,
    How much fun it is turning the yoke when its on, etc.
    That is why I dont have one, that is why MOST dont have one
    Since I don't play basketball with my display devices, it fragility is irrelevant. Since it is not being moved all over the place, this is another weak stab at nothing in terms of making a point. LCD suffer from "backlight leakage" which is why their contrast levels are so low. You can stick a bias light to help out with black levels, but they cannot at this time compete with a CRT device of any catagory when it comes to black levels. Using larger guns on CRT's allows a much higher phosphor density which is why they have more resolution than smaller guns and direct views. Your argument is weak when you start talking about anything of better quality than a direct view television.

    Your turning the yoke comment was stupid at best. Nobody turns the yoke when the television is on. Turning the yoke is not a everyday job, and I know of nobody who has had to do this as a everyday practice. A repairman yes, but not the consumer.

    It is a fact there are far more CRT in service all over the world than flat panels. That is a undisputable fact, so this comment about nobody has them, is a bald face lie.


    I'm sorry, I keep forgetting that your inability to understand abstracts borders on autistic.
    No one ever knows when the law of diminshing returns kicks in, but it does
    do so.
    I would prefer not to use your standards to make that determination. They are too low.


    And yes I have bought several devices costing well over a grand, allow for inflation and most cost that much.
    AND most were CRT based of course.
    My simple set goes at least 90% of the way, and exceeds your stuff in some areas,
    that these areas are in your words" unimportant" is convienent
    Adjusting for inflation does not increase the performance of the display device, so it is irrelevant as a basis of an argument. How do you know something is 90% of anything without experience with both? Abstracts are terrible as they are nothing more than a moving target. We now have standards, which do not allow for abstracts. You have to actually measure performance. And when you do that, you will find that your abstract percentage of performace in reality is much much lower. Measurements of performance are much better to me than just taking your so called experience, as your experience has proven pretty inadequate when it comes to anything higher than a cheap RPTV. As I have said before, you opinion, experience, and what you have forgotten is on par with tissue paper just used to clean a a$$


    I have never owned a Rousch Porsch either, but I can find the fuel in jection system, brakes, etc quite handily.
    Meaningless. We are not talking about cars. I can find my tubes in my projector, it does not mean I can repair them does it? Whether you can find anything does not equal knowledge or experience, and the fact that you think it does is very telling.


    A front projector is just an adapted RPTV, uses three tubes in primary colors to produce a color picture, hardly rocket science.
    The last real improvement was 9" tubes, then most saw the writing on the wall,
    mainly that CRT, which were never intended to be projection devices could never compete with mercury bulbs, which were designed to put out decent light
    Once again back to the light arguement. This shows just how weak your talking points are. Since 9" tubes can reproduce resolution higher than our HDTV standard, it seem that there is no need to advance beyond that. Since 9" CRT can put up enough light on a screen to reproduce an accurate 1080p image, and still meet SMPTE STANDARDS, then your argument if pretty much moot. All a CRT has to do is meet SMPTE standards for light output on the screen, and it has done its job. There is no reason in the world a CRT gun has to burn your eyes out in a brightly lit room, just like there is no real reason a digital projector has to do so. The more light a projector produces over that standard, the poorer the contrast ratio will be. That is why we should not watch high defintiion images in brightly lit rooms, and why peak light output makes absolutely no difference when acheiving ACCURATE images. Your argment only has legs when a person purposely wants to create poor images with poor contrast ratio, and has no desire to meet any standards. This is you in the flesh.

    Good old joe, I BOUGHT MY SET A YEAR AND A HALF AGO, 1,000/'1 was considered quite good for an LCD, although a compromise.
    Well, a cheap direct view CRT could do that easily.

    Sets these days are capable of much more, but for serious watching I turn down the light on the set and contrast is improved a great deal.
    As for 20,000 to one contrast there are some higher end sets now that can acheive at least 10,000
    Let's face it Pix, total on and off on your panel is 1000:1 even when you turn your light down. It can never be more than what the panel can actually accomplish no matter what you do with the lights in your room.

    As far as your comments regarding higher end sets doing 10,000:1, you are correct. That would be the Sony SXRD 4k projector which cost about $60-100,000 based on lens options. A sub $3k three gun CRT projector can easily accomplish that, and that just shows how far a LCD panel or projector has to go to catch up with a low end three gun CRT. There is only one flat panel that meets Joe Kanes and SMPTE recommendations. Its not a LCD based anything, its the Pioneer Kuros plasma panels. The best measured LCD based anything I have seen measured using Joe Kanes and SMPTE standards are basically 8000:1 with a noisy dynamic iris trying to keep up with the shifting light levels from fast moving scenes. Based on the comments I read, the iris's noise levels could be heard even when there were loud scenes in the picture. Once compromise to acheive another.

    I quote joe kane from widescreen review, and what he says about resolution and picture q
    contradicts almost everything you have to say so I WOULD BE CAREFULL QUOTING HIM
    You are a bald face lie. I have EVERY widescreen review mag dating back to when it first started. While you can quote him, you do not understand completely what you are quoting, and you omit or dismiss anything that does not fit your arguement. You tell half truths which are also half lies. That makes your information completely unreliable at best.


    mY FAULT, THATS WHAT YOU GET TRYING TO TALK DOWN TO A NINNY WHO DOESNT EVEN UNDERSTAND the difference between a test bench and real world conditions.
    Last time I checked, test bench measurements tell what something can do in the real world. If the display device has a poor contrast measurement, it will not produce white whites or blacker than black in the real world. If it has a poor greyscale measurement on the bench, it would not be able to accurately transition from black to white. If the scaler does a poor job in the bench, the images will be soft in the real world. If it cannot reproduce the HD color gamut, it will not be able to do that with real world HD images. This is why magazines (and Joe Kane) make these measurements, because they will reflect real world performance. The fact that you think the two can be seperated shows that you do not know as much as you think you know. Tigers have stripes whether you see them in daylight or nightlight. If a panel measures poorly on the bench, it will perform poorly in the real world.


    like the riverboat pilot SAMUEL CLEMENS said, "their are lies, damn lies, and statistics".
    the same could be said of test bench results.
    So your answer to this would be to throw out all test measurements, and not believe them? I suppose Joe Kane said this in Widescreen Review as well.

    YOU KNOW ENOUGH, YOU CAN GET TEST GEAR TO JUMP THROUGH ALL KINDS OF HOOPS.
    Yes you can, and the marketing departments of the manufacturers do it all the time, and guess what, you believe them, and quote them as a basis of your arguement. This is why I go to Joe Kane on display devices. He doesn't make them, and therefore does not need to fudge numbers, or attempt a slight of hand with measurements. He uses industry established measurement parimeters(SMPTE standards which have been rigorlessly tested) so his testing is always accurate and not fudged or manipulated. Sorry Pix, you cannot attempt to re-write history. Speakers are measured as a basis of real world perfomance, and so are display devices. With this everything is abstract(just the way you like it) and there would be no standards for sound reproduction or display performance.

    The key question is real world performance, ease of use and availability.
    I have always tried to emphazise affordable , reliable, well performing gear that will allow the average person to experience the joy of this hobby.
    Real world performance is reflected by test bench measurements. Ease of use is meaningless as something may be easy for me to use, may not be easy for my grandmother to use. Affordable is based on somebody income, I think high end CRT's projectors are affordable, and you don't. Well performing without measurements is abstract and based on a person level of understanding of what performance really is. That measurement is all over the place as people view performance in much different ways. You think brightness is performance, I think that contrast ratio, color accuracy, greyscale accuracy, and getting the proper light levels on the screen is performance. Your key question is not my key question, which is why you need test measurements that create standards. If we went by your abstracts, no single device would look alike in any studio, home, office, or any other place that display devices are present. That is not our real world performance, sorry pixie.

    The stuff you have(or claim to have) has no relevance in the real world.
    Produce gear with those specs that the average person can use and purchase in the real world and you might have something, right now you have an expensive toy
    Sorry, I do not aspire to mediocrity, you do. That is why there is a high end, mid level, and mass market. Everyone idea of performance is not the same. I am not the blend in type, you are. I do not want to be like you, it would be a HUGE step backwards for me.
    Sir Terrence

    Titan Reference 3D 1080p projector
    200" SI Black Diamond II screen
    Oppo BDP-103D
    Datastat RS20I audio/video processor 12.4 audio setup
    9 Onkyo M-5099 power amp
    9 Onkyo M-510 power amp
    9 Onkyo M-508 power amp
    6 custom CAL amps for subs
    3 custom 3 way horn DSP hybrid monitors
    18 custom 3 way horn DSP hybrid surround/ceiling speakers
    2 custom 15" sealed FFEC servo subs
    4 custom 15" H-PAS FFEC servo subs
    THX Style Baffle wall

  13. #163
    Music Junkie E-Stat's Avatar
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    Dec 2003
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    Tell you what guys, I'm going to put this thread out of its misery. What started off with some playful banter at times went a bit over the top. I think we all get the points by now.

    rw

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