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For the past six years I've stood by the following simple guidelines: For LCD, go Samsung. For plasma, go Panasonic. I've followed this myself and made these recommendations to others, and I have yet to have a single instance where someone wasn't happy with the purchase. Can other brands offer good value and reliability? Sure they can. But IMO, and after a LOT of research, these two brands are the best in their respective formats.
HD Guru confirmed a model that has been getting good reveiws for the money in HD 2D. The LG 55LW5600. and the LG 47LW5600. I have not landed on the Samsung equivelant yet.The key ingredients for us are great HD 2D in a bright room with moderate off angle viewing.
I spent a substantial number of hours looking at these TV's in show rooms over the long holiday weekend. My parents' 8 year old Sony LCD is dying, so they needed a replacement. I was heavily biased toward Samsung going into it, and toward LED LCD's due to the energy and contrast ratio factors. We ended up going with an upper range Panasonic plasma...I just found the current generation of LED LCD's to have really unrealistic brightness levels. Watching some clips of movies with lots of special effects, everything seemed really hokey and almost like we were watching a "making of..." show, where you can almost see the ropes and rigging and such. The plasmas, on the other hand, were extremely natural looking in both color and flow/movement, and the upper range Panasonics have black levels on the same order as the best LED TV's.
genjamon, I agree with your observations concerning thinness and the compromises it imposes on back-lighting the LCDs. I recently purchased a Samsung UN55D6050 LED edge lit TV and the biggest problem I have observed has been related to gray-scale accuracy. When a scene has been flimmed under low light conditions areas of the scene which should be viewable are lost in darkness, when attempts are made to compensate by raising the Brightness level the color saturation goes to hell when the film returns to normal illumination levels like those associated with outdoor scenes. Suggestions on how to better adjust the set to compensate for this kind of problem would be very welcome, I have only recently arrived in the land of High-Definition.Looking forward technologically speaking, the LCD TV is merely a stop at a way-station on the way to a true big screen LED TV perhaps based on the Super Amoled technology developed by Samsung. Scotty