Beginners Guide to a Plasma TV
By homecinema
Plasma Televisions
This hub is designed to give you a basic understanding to how plasma televisions work.
The obvious difference between a plasma TV and the conventional CRT set is the size. While a CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) TV has to be up to two feet deep, a plasma model can be a mere six inches in depth.
This is what gives plasma sets their space-age look. You can hang them on a wall, or mount them on an elegant stand, and they will actually enhance your living room.
Plasmas can also have much bigger screens, and prices have dropped sharply as the technology has matured.
Basic technology
The technology employed to allow these slimline dimensions and large screen sizes is complex, but it boils down to an array of gas-filled chambers in the screen. The gas in these chambers is inert (think back to those chemistry lessons you thought you’d never need again and you might dredge up the names ‘xenon’ and ‘neon’), but they can be used to create dots of red, green and blue light, in enough combinations to create many millions of colours and make up a TV picture.
Pros
• Many plasma screens are compatible with high-definition signals.
• Plasma screen sizes go up to 65+ inches (measured diagonally), way bigger than you could get from a CRT set, and the bigger sizes are ideal for getting the most out of high-def material.
Perfectly flat screens – many CRT sets offer this as well, but all plasma sets are flat, meaning there is no distortion of images at the edges of the screen.
Cons
• They are susceptible to ‘screen burn’ where an image (especially a channel logo) can become burned into the screen if displayed for too long.
• Contrast (the difference in brightness between the dark and light areas of a picture) can be poor on some models.
Further Reading
![]() | Amazon Price: $1.18 List Price: $21.99 |
![]() | Amazon Price: $3.12 List Price: $24.99 |
![]() | Amazon Price: $1.97 List Price: $21.99 |
Top tips for buying a plasma screen
• Ensure that a screen can handle high-definition images (look for the HD Ready badge).
• Check the contrast and brightness – these are traditional weak spots in a plasma, but advances in the technology mean you do not have to put up with a washed-out picture any more.
• Check the inputs – make sure there will be enough sockets to hook up all your other equipment.
• Check for speakers! Not all plasma sets have their own speakers, so you may need to buy a separate sound system unless you only watch silent movies.
• Look at the ‘response time’, the amount of time it takes a pixel to go from inactive, to active and back to inactive. Slow response times result in blurred images, especially when trying to handle fast movement. The lower the figure quoted (in milliseconds) the better.
‘HD ready’ plasma sets
Plasma sets are ideal for taking advantage of high-definition broadcasts, and the TV industry is attempting to take the guesswork out of buying a high-definition capable set by introducing the ‘HD ready’ badge. Any TV or monitor that sports this badge is guaranteed to be able to display a high-definition signal in all its glory.
What TV do have?
See results without votingGlossary
CRT – Cathode Ray Tube. The technology inside a conventional TV, where electrons are fired at a phosphor-coated screen to generate images
High-definition – a superior delivery format for TV that presents more lines of detail, resulting in a much sharper, more detailed image. Due to launch in the UK on Sky in 2006
DVI – Digital Visual Interface, a digital video-only input or output
HDCP – High-bandwidth Digital Copy Protection. Intended to stop us from running off high-quality pirate copies of HD programming, it will be used on the Sky HD platform so your TV will need it.
HDMI – High Definition Multimedia Input – also known as the ‘digital Scart’, it carries video and audio signals in digital form
Phosphor – A substance that generates light when excited by an energy source
Plasma – a state of being distinct from gas, where the electrical characteristics of a gas have been changed due to the application of heat or other energy source
Response time – The time it takes for a cell to go from inactive to active and back to inactive. The lower the figure the better
Progressive scan – A method by which image detail on a TV picture is enhanced by showing both halves of a single frame at the same time, as opposed to showing only half a frame at a time



lauradora86 16 months ago
brilliant great pics too.