Home Theater - Plasma TV VS Projectors
Posted: Tuesday, February 28, 2006
by Snakester
Millennium Online Marketing Pty Ltd
Many homeowners are struggling with an important, electronic question: What is the ideal display for my home theater? Many people have fought this debate, but I'll try to make clear some important considerations.
Assuming your home theater has blackout curtains, or exists deep underground let's examine differences between a plasma television and a projector. One advantage of a projector is that you can get a much larger picture than is available in plasma. Projectors can produce images comparable to an 81-inch screen and larger. This just isn't possible with a plasma screen. However, plasma's have the advantage of not needing any amount of space. A projector must have a long enough corridor to project its image on the wall or screen. To get an 81-inch or greater image, you need a decent distance between the projector and the target. Second, a projector's image is dependent on more than the quality of the projector you must be projecting onto a specialized surface or you lose detail. A top of the line HD projector with a very high native resolution would be wasted if you were just projecting the image onto a wall. You need an equally high quality screen with features such as a matte finish to eliminate reflection and glare. A plasma display requires no additional equipment.
Overall, a projector has the potential of creating a beautiful image, but it needs too much to work effectively. If you're creating a private movie theater with lighting control and an investment in a screen, mounting equipment, and blackout curtains, then a projector is your piece of equipment. For everyone else, I suggest a plasma television.
Jakob Culver is founder of the website www.plasmatvarena.com providing information, articles and reviews about plasma tv's. To find more articles like this one visit the site http://www.plasmatvarena.com/
© Millennium Online Marteting Pty Ltd
This article may be reprinted for use in websites
provided that the information box is kept intact.
Email notice of intent to publish is appreciated but not
required: millenniumonlinemarketing@hotmail.com
This Article has been viewed 1,785 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)Very biased article. Just look at the web site address.
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.