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Old 01-16-2013, 10:09 AM   #523
OldDutch
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Originally Posted by Cube Inmate View Post
I'm in the early stages of selecting my next TV model -- it'll be a flat panel in the range of 65-80", and most specs are pretty straightforward to evaluate. But where I have little knowledge is in the area of "smooth motion" processing on newer TVs. My current 46" Samsung is 5+ years old, with no particular smoothing that I'm aware of. When I look at my dad's newer 60" Sharp, though, the picture is way over-processed and suffers really bad "soap opera" look.

On the Sharp, there are variable settings for the motion smoothing -- "off" through "high" -- but even when it's "off" there's still something wrong with the picture, in my view. I certainly don't want to pick a new TV just based on its specs, and then find out that the viewing experience drives me up the wall!
  • Is this something specific to Sharp?
  • Do different brands have different reputations re: smoothing? (Or maybe reputations for not being able to fully turn the smoothing off?)
  • Is this something inherent to newer 120 Hz (or more) TVs? (Web surfing says no, but what does the web know?

Thanks for any info you video-brains can provide.
Honestly, I have never been a big Sharp fan, the price is right, but I just have never liked the picture either.

I'm probably the worst person to ask (I am very bias), but for TV, basically I say get a Panasonic TC Plasma or a Samsung PN Plasma. I love Plasma, as my basement TV is a Pioneer KURO, and the picture is stunning, and there is no motion blur you speak of.

My advice, go for plasma if you can. Get a TV with the best picture, over size. To me, I would rather a 50" KURO picture to any 65" LED. The blacks are just so much deeper and so much richer. Sports are a treat to watch since refresh is just not an issue.

Really to me, it's preference, would you rather a mid-tier car with a giant V8, or a quality built car with a V6. Size is important, but I always will go with picture quality for the exact reasons you state above.
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