In article <1165546981....@73g2000cwn.googlegroups.com>,
sto...@cox.net says...
One item to know is that most DLP's (unless you are willing to spend
$$$$$$$$$$) have only a single mirror chip. It generates the 3 colors by
having a little wheel with colored lenses spin between the light source
and the mirrors to generate the colors. You can often see a rainbow
streak on fast movements, or if you move your head.
Some newer DLP's are using LED's to generate the colors. Some newer
DLP's are spinning the wheel faster to minimize the rainbow effect.
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What gets me is you have this super-high-tech, HDTV, and it has a
mechanical motor and a spinning wheel in it!! Makes me think of the
original CBS color TV process approved in the US before saner heads
prevailed. It was quickly rescinded and changed to NTSC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ntsc
I have CRT HDTV (direct view), and probably won't update until LED or
similar backlighting becomes more standard. Replacing an expensive lamp
every 2 or so years seems like a step backwards to tube electronics!!!
In the Mits line get the 731 series if you want to be able to calibrate
color most precisely and for the value point in the line. In the SXRD stick
with the lower end sets for the best value. The higher end sets (XBR) have
a slightly better DRC for 480i sources, but otherwise are not much different
in performance.
Leonard
"Golf" <sto...@cox.net> wrote in message
news:1165621422.9...@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
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What kind of motor do they use, and what speed does it run? How about life
expectancy? Greater than the lamp?
Just curious . . .
thanks,
Tom
It varies with brand. Most would have a life expectancy far greater than
the lamp. A great deal of the concern comes from lots of early failures in
RCA and Samsing sets. In four years of selling and servicing DLP products
(neither of those brands), we have had exactly one bad color wheel motor,
and that was a virtual DOA, well within the warranty period. IME, it is far
less of a concern than optical path problems on LCD and LCOS sets, or
phosphor aging in PDPs.
Leonard
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