Bien parece ser que tenian razon los que decian que el Philips de 37 no era realmente 1080p.
Al parecer la señal que le llega de 1080p la convierte a 1080i y despues la vuelva a pasar a 1080p con perdida de calidad de imagen.
No se si esto pasara con el de 42 pulgadas. Pero es una gran cagada por parte de philips..
Mi gran duda ahora es si es solo cosa del modelo de 37 o tambien pasa en el de 42. Coño que trabajo cuesta comprarse un televisor.
Lo he leido el la review de hdtvtest del modelo de 37
Comentan tambien el tema del lag y el no poder calibrar los negros tan bien como en otros modelos.
Pros
Ambilight works well to improve perceived blacks and contrast
[100Hz Clear LCD] delivers the highest motion resolution measured on an LCD TV to date (but introduces halos around moving objects; see Cons)
Strong standard-definition performance thanks to some superb video processing
Very good colour decoding with no significant colour push
White balance controls available in user menu permits near-D65 greyscale calibration
Solid (though quirky; see Cons) connectivity with 3 x HDMI 1.3, 1 x USB, etc.
USB port can be used to view JPEG photos, listen to MP3s, and update the TV firmware
Swivelling pedestal stand comes pre-attached out-of-the-box for quick setup
User menu extensive yet reasonably easy to navigate
Stylish infrared remote control with decent tactile feedback
[Settings Assistant] can help nontechnical viewers achieve an attractive (though likely inaccurate) picture
Cons
Calibrated black level not as deep as those on Sony and Samsung SPVA panels
No manual backlight control available in the user menu
Input lag (100ms slower than a Samsung F96) may impair gaming response, or cause external lip-synch delay
Converts incoming 1080p signal to 1080i before reconverting it back to 1080p
Cannot convert video-based 1080i to 1080p without losing resolution
Exhibits deinterlacing artifacts with 1080p/24 signal
[HD Natural Motion] and [100Hz LCD TV] introduces deinterlacing artifacts in the form of shimmering halos around moving objects
Only part of the settings can be saved independently per input
High-pitched whine during standby (may be specific to my set)
Weak speakers with poor dynamic range, soundstage and resolution
Limited off-axis viewing angle
Connectivity is slightly quirky (no VGA input; digital audio out is coaxial; component audio in is a 3.5mm mini jack socket)
http://www.hdtvtest.co.uk/Philips-37PFL9632D/Conclusion
Otra cosa interesante. Explican como eliminar los artefactos. Pero tiene sus contras pues surge el judder.
The only way to eradicate these deinterlacing artifacts is to abandon 1080p/24 and send 1080p60/ 1080i60/ 720p signals to the Philips instead, but then telecine judder would resurface. [HD Natural Motion] can take care of judder (let's face it: if you are troubled by line twitter/ moiré/ jaggies, you probably cannot tolerate telecine judder too), but entails its own set of problems.
Y me ha parecido curioso esto otro. Que aconsejan poner el Rango completo del RGB de la Ps3 en limitado para evitar los problemas de los detalles de las sombras creo....pero recordemos que en rango limitado se ve peor.
I have no complaints about the detail and colour rendition on the 37PFL9632D for high-definition gaming. To preserve rather than crush in-game shadow detail, set [RGB Full Range (HDMI)] on the Sony PS3 to "Limited".
En cuanto al lag. Dice que en los Samsung y los Toshibas solia hacer 4 disparos a la cabeza por partido. Y con el Philips a duras penas puede hacer 2.
On the Samsung LE52F96BD and Toshiba 47Z3030D, I used to average 4 headshots per game; on the Philips 37PFL9632D, I'm lucky if I can hit 2.
Una cosa interesante es la tremendisima resolucion que consigue el panel
900 with [100Hz Clear LCD] on; 300 when off
Tiene muchos pros el televisor. Pero por otro lado tambien muchos contras.
Da que pensar al comprarselo. A mi ya me ha dejado con la duda en la cabeza.