TV advice
#16
Re: TV advice
Yes thats what I thought - there will be standard def channels, but they will be digital. You can get an SD digital TV - but to be honest HD won't be much more nowadays.
#17
Re: TV advice
Just bought this one
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....=1186005983963
Is mighty fine. Picture is good (not excellent) but this is on standard comcast broadcasts. (Concast more like - avoid if at all possible!)
The TV itself is ready to go out of the box no need to attach stand yourself.
Has a pair of HDMI, Pair of Component, PC input amongst others.
And the remote is very simple. Rather than a million buttons on the remote you use the menu driven options on the screen. Very easy to use.
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....=1186005983963
Is mighty fine. Picture is good (not excellent) but this is on standard comcast broadcasts. (Concast more like - avoid if at all possible!)
The TV itself is ready to go out of the box no need to attach stand yourself.
Has a pair of HDMI, Pair of Component, PC input amongst others.
And the remote is very simple. Rather than a million buttons on the remote you use the menu driven options on the screen. Very easy to use.
#18
Re: TV advice
Just bought this one
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....=1186005983963
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....=1186005983963
#19
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 6,848
Re: TV advice
Just over a year ago (when I was buying an Xmas gift for my spouse) someone on this board - perhaps Bob - suggested this company for buying online:
http://www.crutchfield.com/App/Produ...al_nav*target2
Customer service is superb (although they're not always the cheapest) but they do give a lot of technical advice and free lifetime product support. It's worth taking a look at their 'weekly specials' on TVs as listed in the link above.
Also - TOP TIP
Do you currently have an American Express card in the UK?
If so, you can arrange to have a US issued Amex card to use as soon as you move to the States (but don't close down your UK Amex card until the US one has been operating for a couple of months).
The reason I'm saying this is that even on a basic green *US issued* Amex card, you get free extended warranty on most purchases, effectively doubling the manufacturer's warranty period. For example, if you buy a TV with six months warranty, Amex doubles it so it becomes a 1 year warranty. If the orginal warranty is for 1 year, Amex extends it to 2 years. It's called the 'Buyer's Assurance Plan':
https://www143.americanexpress.com/c...ARDS/145/1/2/1
If you don't have a UK Amex card, I strongly suggest you arrange to have one before leaving Blighty. I don't know what we would have done without ours, since Chase only gave us a pitiful credit limit on the Visa cards they issued as we had no credit rating. No such worries with Amex as they're charge cards which you pay off in full each month, which is what we've always done anyway. We actually had them sent to my husband's new office in New York, via his boss, and they were waiting on arrival when we moved here.
I love Amex!
http://www.crutchfield.com/App/Produ...al_nav*target2
Customer service is superb (although they're not always the cheapest) but they do give a lot of technical advice and free lifetime product support. It's worth taking a look at their 'weekly specials' on TVs as listed in the link above.
Also - TOP TIP
Do you currently have an American Express card in the UK?
If so, you can arrange to have a US issued Amex card to use as soon as you move to the States (but don't close down your UK Amex card until the US one has been operating for a couple of months).
The reason I'm saying this is that even on a basic green *US issued* Amex card, you get free extended warranty on most purchases, effectively doubling the manufacturer's warranty period. For example, if you buy a TV with six months warranty, Amex doubles it so it becomes a 1 year warranty. If the orginal warranty is for 1 year, Amex extends it to 2 years. It's called the 'Buyer's Assurance Plan':
https://www143.americanexpress.com/c...ARDS/145/1/2/1
If you don't have a UK Amex card, I strongly suggest you arrange to have one before leaving Blighty. I don't know what we would have done without ours, since Chase only gave us a pitiful credit limit on the Visa cards they issued as we had no credit rating. No such worries with Amex as they're charge cards which you pay off in full each month, which is what we've always done anyway. We actually had them sent to my husband's new office in New York, via his boss, and they were waiting on arrival when we moved here.
I love Amex!
#22
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Oct 2004
Location: The Big Apple
Posts: 1,834
Re: TV advice
Just over a year ago (when I was buying an Xmas gift for my spouse) someone on this board - perhaps Bob - suggested this company for buying online:
http://www.crutchfield.com/App/Produ...al_nav*target2
Customer service is superb (although they're not always the cheapest) but they do give a lot of technical advice and free lifetime product support. It's worth taking a look at their 'weekly specials' on TVs as listed in the link above.
Also - TOP TIP
Do you currently have an American Express card in the UK?
If so, you can arrange to have a US issued Amex card to use as soon as you move to the States (but don't close down your UK Amex card until the US one has been operating for a couple of months).
The reason I'm saying this is that even on a basic green *US issued* Amex card, you get free extended warranty on most purchases, effectively doubling the manufacturer's warranty period. For example, if you buy a TV with six months warranty, Amex doubles it so it becomes a 1 year warranty. If the orginal warranty is for 1 year, Amex extends it to 2 years. It's called the 'Buyer's Assurance Plan':
https://www143.americanexpress.com/c...ARDS/145/1/2/1
If you don't have a UK Amex card, I strongly suggest you arrange to have one before leaving Blighty. I don't know what we would have done without ours, since Chase only gave us a pitiful credit limit on the Visa cards they issued as we had no credit rating. No such worries with Amex as they're charge cards which you pay off in full each month, which is what we've always done anyway. We actually had them sent to my husband's new office in New York, via his boss, and they were waiting on arrival when we moved here.
I love Amex!
http://www.crutchfield.com/App/Produ...al_nav*target2
Customer service is superb (although they're not always the cheapest) but they do give a lot of technical advice and free lifetime product support. It's worth taking a look at their 'weekly specials' on TVs as listed in the link above.
Also - TOP TIP
Do you currently have an American Express card in the UK?
If so, you can arrange to have a US issued Amex card to use as soon as you move to the States (but don't close down your UK Amex card until the US one has been operating for a couple of months).
The reason I'm saying this is that even on a basic green *US issued* Amex card, you get free extended warranty on most purchases, effectively doubling the manufacturer's warranty period. For example, if you buy a TV with six months warranty, Amex doubles it so it becomes a 1 year warranty. If the orginal warranty is for 1 year, Amex extends it to 2 years. It's called the 'Buyer's Assurance Plan':
https://www143.americanexpress.com/c...ARDS/145/1/2/1
If you don't have a UK Amex card, I strongly suggest you arrange to have one before leaving Blighty. I don't know what we would have done without ours, since Chase only gave us a pitiful credit limit on the Visa cards they issued as we had no credit rating. No such worries with Amex as they're charge cards which you pay off in full each month, which is what we've always done anyway. We actually had them sent to my husband's new office in New York, via his boss, and they were waiting on arrival when we moved here.
I love Amex!
#23
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 2,717
Re: TV advice
Where are you moving to? How large do you envisage your house being?
We have a 32" TV here in LA and it looks apt for the room size - in Texas (in our much bigger home) it looked very small.
I have a 28" set from the UK, it looks like a portable.
Remember a widescreen set isn't going to have the same impact as a 4:3 set - you'll probably want bigger if your going from standard to widescreen.
These two images have the same diagonal measurement (the standard 4:3 ratio (top) offers much more real estate than the widescreen one)
We have a 32" TV here in LA and it looks apt for the room size - in Texas (in our much bigger home) it looked very small.
I have a 28" set from the UK, it looks like a portable.
Remember a widescreen set isn't going to have the same impact as a 4:3 set - you'll probably want bigger if your going from standard to widescreen.
These two images have the same diagonal measurement (the standard 4:3 ratio (top) offers much more real estate than the widescreen one)