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LCD TFT Television

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 13:25
by speleobod
got the chance to have one of these at the right price,....which seems too cheap!!!

Advertised as LCD TFT . Is this the cheap end of LCD screen technology or worth 'looking' at?

Sorry not a T25 question but I know the range of intelligence in the club so I thought I'd ask.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 13:30
by Cate
Depends what the right price is, they are excellent for in the van as they dont take up so much room as an ordinary tv, and you can get them 12v too.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 13:35
by speleobod
A 12 inch 240/12v for £80.00 all in. Still not sure what TFT means though.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 13:37
by Cate
Buy it now!

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 13:46
by airhead
TFT is the standard for all LCD TVs. It means Thin Film Transistor. Its basically the new form of LCD TV which has a much broader viewing angle, handles movement a lot better and has a much higher quality. So its good.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 14:47
by shepster
As Cate says 'buy it' i paid £200 for my 15" one last year so that sounds like a real bargain, i never use it as a tv though as it's quite simple to link it up to a dvd player. I've mounted mine on the ceiling between the seats just behind the drivers head so the kiddies can watc films on the move.I got the idea from 'beach bum' who posts on here, if your going to bustypes come and have a nosey.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 18:44
by Beach Bum
Just make sure it is TV/Monitor and not just a Monitor. If you do buy it and put it in the van if you are wiring it to a leisure battery as I do beware when it is switched off it could still drain your battery. I had a problem with this and cured it by installing an inline switch.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 19:56
by Horza
Thin Film Transistor, ah it all makes sense now. I have a TFT monitor on the PC but it's a Sony Triniton CRT one and it stands for something else in this case. I always wondered about the TFT bit in LCDs.

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 20:52
by speleobod
Thank you folks its now mine all mine. will take a spare battery to run it, so when its dead its dead and we can read books or talk or play backgammon or something.

Any recommendations for an aeriel with booster on board???

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 23:22
by lhd
CRT= cathode ray tube, as in old deep style tv's...
lhd......................

Posted: 09 Apr 2006, 23:24
by airhead
Horza, have a look at http://www.howstuffworks.com. It explains it all there. Hang onto the sony trinitron though. Theyre great. Hand picked phosphors. Thats what trinitron means. Now sure how they hand pick a phosphor but theyre better quality. I work in a sony centre by the way. Thats how I know.

Speleobod, the one for all aeriels with the booster in them are usually pretty good and theyre not at all expensive.

Posted: 10 Apr 2006, 09:09
by ghost123uk
Some of us use laptop computers at home and out and about (TFT by the way :) )

I have just bought a "FreeView" digital TV unit for mine.
It cost £40 and gives me about 30 TV channels (plus 20 Radio channels).

Plus a little device that sends the sound from the laptop to the main camper sound system.

And I can watch DVD's on it, or play 1000's of MP3's from it.

Will work for days on an adapter from the lesiure battery :)

Great for those rainy VW shows !!

Posted: 10 Apr 2006, 09:26
by airhead
I was thinking of doing the same thing myself. Im actually using a nice little laptop I got for €200 at the moment. If I put a bigger hard drive and more ram in it it would do the job nicely! Either that or I have a desktop PC I could use and get a monitor for it. Doesnt need upgrading but the monitor would have to be a flat screen.

Posted: 10 Apr 2006, 10:55
by ghost123uk
@ airhead

Do you mean a PC in the van !! ? :roll:

The only requirment I found that was pretty essential with the Frewview card for the laptop is USB 2 capability. Tho if you haven't got that, you can get a PCMCIA to USB 2 conterter card - thats what I did.

Posted: 10 Apr 2006, 14:21
by airhead
Well it wouldnt be a first! Theres a guy in type 2 ireland who has one in his bay. Along with a wireless keyboard / mouse and a flat panel monitor it works out well and the PC itself can be hidden away.