DLPs Obsolete Yet?

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Emulex

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2001
9,759
1
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yah that laser looks cool. no more bulbs. i wonder what happens if you use your DSLR to record the screen?
 

Zaap

Diamond Member
Jun 12, 2008
7,162
424
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When I bought my DLP I knew that I had no need to wall mount and therefore no reason to restrict myself to flat panels. I couldn't be happier with my purchase.

What I find funny is that most people don't wall mount their TV and really a DLP doesn't require much more table space than an equivalently sized flat panel.
Exactly. I couldn't be happier with the 56" Samsung we bought 2 years ago. It's been nothing but a pleasure and definitely at the time I couldn't have gotten anything nearly as good in the same size range without paying nearly double.

I also really love the picture quality- to my eye, a DLP has a subtle 'softness' to the image that's non-pixely, but still razor sharp for HD images. I dare say that even crappy SD images look the best they're ever going to on a DLP compared to any other large format which will be much less forgiving.

Like you say, if not wall mounting, and depending on the space, a flat panel doesn't really matter. In my setup, I'd merely have a bigger gap between the back of the TV/entertainment center and the wall for dust to collect.
 
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mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
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while we are on the topic of DLPs has anyone actually seen the mitsubishi 75in Laservue in the wild yet?

http://www.mitsubishi-tv.com/laser.html

They've been talking about laser TV for a while now. Looks promising, but I wouldn't be surprised if it went vapourware, like SED did.

DLP offers great picture but I think it's size and the bulbs hurt it. People want something they can mount on a wall these days.
 
Jun 18, 2000
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They've been talking about laser TV for a while now. Looks promising, but I wouldn't be surprised if it went vapourware, like SED did.

DLP offers great picture but I think it's size and the bulbs hurt it. People want something they can mount on a wall these days.
You can actually buy LaserVue sets right now. The first gen product went on sale in 2008. How is that vaporware?
 

stlcardinals

Senior member
Sep 15, 2005
729
0
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If you do buy a DLP, I would buy a spare lamp to have on hand. I know when the lamp on mine went out on a saturday morning, I paid more than I should have in time and money to track down a replacement.
 

BurnItDwn

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
26,353
1,862
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Dunno about TV's, but when it comes to projectors...
DLP images are usually a bit "smoother" and less likely to run into "screen door" issues vs LCD projectors.
DLP generally has better contrast and black levels than LCD (note: CRT much better then both though, and LCD's have improved a lot in recent years)
LCD usually has "richer" colors than DLP.

Tell your folks that they need 106 inches
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...rodid=11531436
Muahahahaha