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Anyone know the diff between HD ready and full HD?

4 replies

CountessDracula · 26/02/2009 18:41

I am looking to buy an lcd tv
the bloke at richer sounds said that unless you are putting a computer through it it will make no diff whether it is full hd or not unless you have a big screen (this is 32 inches)
Is that true do you think?

OP posts:
CountessDracula · 26/02/2009 18:41

it is a farking minefield

OP posts:
SlightlyMadScotland · 26/02/2009 18:49

OK I will c&p from wikipedia..but translation further down the page:

A common native resolution used in HD Ready LCD TV panels is 1366 x 768[16] pixels instead of the ATSC Standard 1280 x 720 pixels. This is due to maximization of manufacturing yield and resolution of VGA, VRAM that comes with a 768 pixel format. Hence, LCD manufacturers adopt the 16:9 ratio compatible for the HD Ready 1080p video standard. Nevertheless, every HDTV has an overscan processing chipset to fix resolution scaling and color rendering, eg LG XD Engine, SONY BRAVIA Engine. Only when viewing 1080i/1080p HD contents under HD Ready 1080p where there is true pixel-for-pixel reproduction, and for HD ready LCD TV, do some signals undergo a scaling process which results in a 3-5% loss of picture.

It should be noted that the numbers used for "HD-Ready" image resolutions do not constitute acceptable 750- or 1125-line video signals in most standards-compliant hardware; in this respect terms such as "720p" and "1080p" are mostly used for advertising, though that does not necessarily mean that HD-Ready TVs labeled in this manner are incapable of accepting those formats as input.

Additionally, the "Clean Aperture" numbers are almost always contained within the frames of their respective "Production Aperture" numbers (e.g., a 1888×1062 rectangle would be contained within a 1920×1080 frame). This is to maintain compatibility with analog signals, which can often become distorted close to the edge of the frame. It also increases the chance that a digital signal being played on overscan-enabled equipment will display the entire picture visibly.

So I would say that if you don't understand the difefrence you don't need to understand the differene

SlightlyMadScotland · 26/02/2009 18:50
wildfish · 26/02/2009 20:06

HD comes in three main modes.
720p 1366x786
1080i 1920x1024 interlaced
1080p 1920x1024 full

HD ready means its ready for at least 720p
HD full I would imaging should be 1080p.

But I'd ignore the HD ready/full and check what it can actually handle, since retailer like to mislead

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