thoughts? i was bored and paging through tigerdirect's catalogue and saw their "hi-res" screens and hdtv projectors...getting a pretty nice system seemed to cost $280 for the screen (100" widescreen, motorized with remote) and about $2000 for the projector (hdtv ready, 1500 lumens, projects from rear or front depending on the screen)...okay, so that's what, $2300 for a 100" widescreen setup?assuming you have the space, how does this compare to, say, a 50" widescreen hdtv flat panel (the cheapest being some brand name i've never heard of - maxent at best buy for $2600)?i KNOW there's got to be a quality difference, i just don't know how severe it would be, and what the main disadvantages would bei did NOT bother to search for this topic already, and i didn't feel like googling it (besides, i'd rather have the opinion of people i can meet face to face if i REALLY wanted to)
2/18/2006 3:16:34 PM
I'm not sure what the difference would be but I would be concerened with the life of the bulb/bulbs for the projector and the replacement cost. Might want to factor that in also.
2/18/2006 3:28:54 PM
paging Quinn
2/18/2006 3:30:38 PM
the $400 bulbs every coupel years turned me off.
2/18/2006 3:39:49 PM
most projectors don't have sound, or sound that'd you'd want to use for that kind of viewing.3000 hour bulb life will last you 1.6 years watching 5 hours a day every single day.however, $400 for a new bulb gets you back to where you started compared to buying another $2500 tv if something breaks or pixels die.i personally love having a projector, but i also have a standard crt tv for every day tv watching.
2/18/2006 4:10:52 PM
2/18/2006 4:12:36 PM
thanks for the advice...i WISH i could afford it, this is information for my girlfriend's parents, and with as much tv and movie watching they do (mostly movies), i thought they would benefit from having a slightly more advanced setup if the price/quality wasn't too differentthanks again!
2/18/2006 4:36:35 PM