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Originally Posted by Carmine
I was at a friend-of-friend house yesterday. The guy had a Sony widescreen set (Less than I year old I think, I was there exactly one year ago, and he had a CRT). I didn't see "WEGA" on the set anywhere, so I think it was a LCD.
OH MY GOD!! WHAT A GARBAGE PICTURE!! The colors were horrible, lots of red bleeding, other colors were weak. Sharpness was non-existant... It looked like I was watching a low-res MPEG. Add to that, he had a dish... Pixelation up the wazoo, and all kinds of frame delays. Sometimes, I felt like I was watching a mechanical TV, the 1/4" sized scan lines were so obvious!
The worst part came when one of the other goobers at the party walked in and said "Wow, that TV sure has a nice picture!"  This same guy stuffed a garbage disposal full of chicken bones at last years party, so you can imagine how sharp he is!
Meanwhile, my '77 Zenith Chromacolor daily watcher has such a sharp, realistic picture with such balanced colors and true blacks, that it looks like you could reach into it.. This is with the OTA signal. To think it's being made obsolete by junk such as above, is to be sick!
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Ugh. I know what you mean. The best picture I've seen is on our 1982 Zenith System 3 that has been our daily watcher since February of 1983. She's shows her age at rare times when the picture has a red cast to it so I'm looking for parts but when that happens, I let it rest for a 4 days to a week and then it may not act up for a week to almost a year, the time varies. It's usually trouble free for a long time. Heck, IMHO, it rivals many HDTV pics I've seen. Runners up, well, when the convergence is set right, IIRC, our 1970 Zenith (23") Chromacolor had a good picture too. We have a backup 1998 Zenith BPC, probably a Goldstar, it's a 19 incher, I can't complain about the picture but it cannot beat the older Zeniths but for 1990's or 2000 standards, I'll take it.
HDTV mandation that is going on, don't get me started. I think they should have allocated a bloc of UHF channels for it, leave the rest of UHF/VHF for NTSC and let things go from there. Since the old AMPS cellphones are going away, we can have channels 70 thru 83 back, perhaps HDTV should go there.