- Nov 6, 2005
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Call me a fool or whatever, my wife decided to replace out 8 year old analog 32" crt TV
for a new a LCD 31.5" HDTV.
After reading the fine print in the owners manual, along with the legalise advice not to stick my tongue into electrical outlets, I discovered the operating wattage of the 31.5"
Lcd was 160 watts, and looking at the back of the old CRT 32'', it listed the max wattage at 140 watts. So bottom line, not as I expected, the LCD consumes some 14.28% more power when operating.
But my question concerns what power is consumed when the set is not operating? Its my understanding than in the off state, a crt type television consumes some power to keep its electronics warm, which allows it to come on faster when you press the on switch. Is this also true of a LCD set?
for a new a LCD 31.5" HDTV.
After reading the fine print in the owners manual, along with the legalise advice not to stick my tongue into electrical outlets, I discovered the operating wattage of the 31.5"
Lcd was 160 watts, and looking at the back of the old CRT 32'', it listed the max wattage at 140 watts. So bottom line, not as I expected, the LCD consumes some 14.28% more power when operating.
But my question concerns what power is consumed when the set is not operating? Its my understanding than in the off state, a crt type television consumes some power to keep its electronics warm, which allows it to come on faster when you press the on switch. Is this also true of a LCD set?
