AS POSTED. BRAND NEW STILL IN BOX. DOESN'T WORK FOR MY SPACE AS I THOUGHT IT WOULD. POST YOUR OFFERS HERE OR EMAIL ME @ SILVERMAN326@GMAIL.COM. FEEL FREE TO WRITE WITH ANY QUESTIONS (MODEL NUMBER IS LG 50PQ30 IF YOU WANT TO LOOK UP SPECS) PICK UP ONLY, IN SOUTHWEST HOUSTON AREA. -JASON
Thanks for your interest. I have already been offered $775.00 through the board, so that would be the starting point.
Well a) I've been offered $775.00 for it already b) I don't think you'll find it in stores or online anywhere for the price you're mentioning right now (possibly in November with a Black Friday deal only...but by then you'll be missing 1/2 of NFL season) - if not, show me where, as I'd be happy to honor/oblige if you're interested and Mr. $775.00 doesn't happen to come through. Thanks -Jason
1080i isn't necessarily better than 720p, especially with tv over 42". Eventually the technology used in 720p tv will make 1080i obsolete.
I've seen 1080 and 720 on this TV with solid/good HDMI cables...there is minimal viewing difference at best, especially for sports in HD...and the 720 is obviously much cheaper (good for most of us in this economic environment). Anyhow, just looking for interest & offers, not critique. Thanks.
100% correct. Especially when LED's are more prevelant in 3-5 years....but not now. And LED's will be 5 x more expensive as well.
Fine Fine 775.01 is the price I will take.. Give me 775.01 and I will take that silly 720p Plasma from you..
Ahh just caught the verbiage...I missed that last night. I was watching football and skimming the lingo rather than reading. Thanks for pointing that out Anyhow, still available...but going to make my decision most likely by mid-next week, so send in your true offers. I'm at $775.00 (though maybe the guy won't come through - you never know). If you offer $800, it's yours.
Unless you're watching a 50in from 6 feet away or closer you cannot tell the difference between 1080P and 720P (and I have owned both). With a 42in there is no way in hell I spend the extra on 1080P. http://reviews.cnet.com/720p-vs-1080p-hdtv/ "We still believe that when you're dealing with TVs 50 inches and smaller, the added resolution has only a very minor impact on picture quality. In our tests, we put 720p (or 768p) sets next to 1080p sets, then feed them both the same source material, whether it's 1080i or 1080p, from the highest-quality Blu-ray player. We typically watch both sets for a while, with eyes darting back and forth between the two, looking for differences in the most-detailed sections, such as hair, textures of fabric, and grassy plains. Bottom line: It's almost always very difficult to see any difference--especially from farther than 8 feet away on a 50-inch TV. " "The extra sharpness afforded by the 1080p televisions he's seen is noticeable only when watching 1080i or 1080p sources on a larger screens, say 55 inches and bigger, or with projectors that display a wall-size picture"