DKean

Mays Landing NJ.

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Joined: 06/17/2003

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Will you notice the difference in the picture on the TV screen between a 720p (or is it 780 p ) and a 1080p ? The 1080p cost more.
2006 F350 CC LB 6.0 diesel dually. 2006 Cedar Creek fifth wheel. Six 6 volt golf cart batteries,3000 watt inverter. Mountain Master generator in truck bed remote start. Automatic satellite dish.Air suspension on truck and trailer.Level up with 6 jacks RC
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2oldman

Winchester WA

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Joined: 04/15/2001

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You may if you play a BluRay disc, or watch Directv in 1080. Eventually, yes, you probably will if you have normal eyesight. Avoid the Wally World cheap sets too, as all pictures with the same specs are not equal. And the sound won't be loud enough either.
To me SD television looks blurry, like some Lifetime movies and BTV shows.
No matter what we say, please go compare for yourself.
* This post was
edited 04/11/12 04:42pm by 2oldman *
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85antique

Ne Pa

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Under 50" you wont see a diff i knOw others will disagree but its the
Truth its a money game save your money buy the cheep one i have
Both set then side by side cant see a differance
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The Texan

Meridian, Idaho

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If you are over the age of 45 or have a TV under 50+" there is NO difference that you will see. 1080p is for the young with excellent, uncorrected eyesight and the very large TV. To us old f..ts, a total waste of money, even with the large TVs.
Bob & Betsy(FishNFanatic) - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
'05 HR Endeavor 40PRQ, 400 Cummins-Pulling our '11 Silverado LT, Ex Cab 6.2L NHT 4x4, w/2010 Rzr or 01 V Star in back.
Where the wheels are stopped today
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DKean

Mays Landing NJ.

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Well I can see 70 in my rear view so I will save some money. Thanks. I remember when there was no television and radio was king.
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Deetour

Washington

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I agree to check 'em out side by side.
We have a 65", 720 and the picture is absolutely stunning with its clarity and color.
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schneid

In the Wind

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http://www.faqhdtv.com/720p-vs-1080p-hd-resolutions
http://hometheater.about.com/od/hometheatervideobasics/qt/720p-Vs-1080p.htm
http://carltonbale.com/1080p-does-matter
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Big Katuna

Deland, FL

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Depends what you watch. Much content looks fine in 720p. Many sports content is very good quality and I can (at 60) can tell a difference between my old 720p set and a 1080p set. Old reruns, not so much.
My Kharma ran over my Dogma.
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schneid

In the Wind

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OTA HD content is better than same resolution on Cable and Sat as it is not compressed.
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tatest

Oklahoma Green Country

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If the screen is big enough, or if you get close to it, and you actually have 1080p source material.
If your source material is 720 resolution (most satellite and cable) it might even get blurry from smoothing as it is scaled to a higher resolution.
SD stuff gets blurry being scaled up to even just 720 resolution, if the scaling processors are poor (this a big part of the cost difference between cheaper and more expensive sets). But a lot of that can be coming from the other end too, where the analog material was digitized and compressed.
Tom Test
Itasca Spirit 29B
2001 Ranger Edge
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