tube train
New member
- Sep 10, 2009
- 347
I have sky hd and to be honest..even with football i put on 401 (standard sky sports) instead of 408 (hd skysports) as someone above said you can live without it and it doesnt improve things to much
Need to buy an expensive 1080p TV, Plasmas are best.Over 2k will get you a belter that will have enough processing power to show all complicated and busy HD scenes. Best way to see how good the TV is , is to watch a soccer game with snow. The snow makes the TVs processors really work overtime and the continuing movement of the camera over the pitch, players and crowd add to this processing train. If it looks good and the snowflakes are not smudging then the TV is a goodjun. I treated myself to a Pioneer Kuor a couple of years back for my belated 50th birthday present. Best £4k I ever spent.Have never seen the Albion lose on it either.
TNBA
TTF
Need to buy an expensive 1080p TV, Plasmas are best.Over 2k will get you a belter that will have enough processing power to show all complicated and busy HD scenes. Best way to see how good the TV is , is to watch a soccer game with snow. The snow makes the TVs processors really work overtime and the continuing movement of the camera over the pitch, players and crowd add to this processing train. If it looks good and the snowflakes are not smudging then the TV is a goodjun. I treated myself to a Pioneer Kuor a couple of years back for my belated 50th birthday present. Best £4k I ever spent.Have never seen the Albion lose on it either.
TNBA
TTF
Personally I don't really see the point of it all. I have a regular digital tv and the sound and the picture are absolutely fine thank you very much. I can't see the justification of the extra expense, just to slightly improve something that is perfectly satisfactory in the first place.
Yes, I've seen HD tv, and agree, it is slightly better than regular tv, but I'm really not that bothered by it.
I think you have it slightly wrong there. As a TV is a digital device, it basically only shows what it's being sent through the HDMI lead. The only extra processing would be the digital processing if it's a 100hz set or something like that.
When you have snow and similar things which make the picture more "complicated" it's more down to HD equipment (especailly the compression unit) used by the broadcaster, and the bit rate their output is set to.
In regards to this BBC HD's feed quality has reduced considerably in the last few months after BBC fiddled with the HD output rates.