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Ripping SACD as WAV file = same sound quality? - Page 2 - SH Forums. No Audio on Blu-ray Rips - Page 2 - SlySoft Forum. Los Angeles, CA - OTA - Page 211. Quote: Originally Posted by voidhawk Hi All, been trying to follow this thread .. but at 211 pages ... it's a little difficult. although with the search, i see many people have issues with KTTV (11.1) I got a UHF antenna to test and see what I could pick up. I just pointed it out my window towards mt wilson - got Fox no problem and got the other major stations 2,4,5,7,9,13 at 100% signal. I moved the antenna onto the roof pointed at 19 deg (magnetic) which is what TVFOOL says to point towards.

I have a ClearStream 2 Long Range HDTV Antenna //www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp? Tried rescanning after the move .. no help. . ~ mark Mark, My comment immediately above relating to the C4 applies even more so to the C2 (and the C1). Your coax is the VHF receiving element. I've had excellent experimental results by doing the following: Check this post: and several following for a very early observation I made of this effect.

Sony's LED-based LCD claims 'best' crown | Crave. The Sony KDL-55XBR8 is officially the best LCD TV CNET has ever tested. It can't overcome the picture quality advantages of the best plasma, however, and it still costs a mint. We described the battle for "best" between hyperexpensive LED-backlit LCD televisions previously, and in our review of the Sony we compared it directly with the , its principal LCD competitor, as well as to the best HDTV we've ever tested, the plasma. The Sony outperformed the Samsung in most important areas, namely black-level performance, but it exhibited the same sort of off-angle issues and minor "blooming," where black areas become slightly brighter near very bright areas of the screen.

Still, Sony's "Triluminos" LED technology seems give it the upper hand over the Samsung in these areas, and its picture is still downright stunning. In fact, in rooms with lots of ambient light the Sony will trounce even the Pioneer Kuro. White Balance menu: R-Gain: 0 G-Gain: -1 B-Gain: -7 R-Bias: -1 G-Bias: 0 B-Bias: 1. Sony Insider » Televisions. Out of all the consumer electronics products available today, the TV is probably the only one that has pleased people by getting larger.

Going back 40 years, we find that Sony had already announced a big-screen TV that anticipated those of today. It was in 1968 when Sony revealed to the world the first Trinitron Color TV, a product which would inevitably become a major contributor to a shining future for the company. Last year, in fact, marks the 40th anniversary since its initial launch. Yet despite the fact it was such a busy time, the insatiable appetite of Sony engineers for challenge led them to come up with one idea after another, including a big-screen TV that caused a sensation when it was first announced.

Today, numerous manufacturers have announced TVs with screens that exceed 100 inches, but this was no less than 40 years ago. Multi-service image search. KDL-46XBR8 - Software Updates & Drivers.