Old CRT TVs are out of date box in this world. It has been found that more than 60% of the world population is using LCD/LED TVs these days and remaining are opting to upgrade their Old TV boxes. Recently one of my friend went to purchase LCD/LED TV and boggled up with some of the technical words. So before buying LCD/LED TV we should be aware of couple of terms. One of the critical thing is LCD and LED categorizing.

Many of the people still thinks LED TV is far better than LCD TV. So let us start from this point. An LED TV is nothing but an LCD which uses LED back-lighting. TV manufactures has hyped this topic and advertise this sort of display as LED display. This not true LED display but is often called so. The basic difference between the two is that an LED TV uses light emitting diodes for the backlighting, where as an LCD uses fluorescent lamps as backlights. There are two types of LED TV backlighting Edge lit and full array.

1. Screen Size Length of TV diagonally measured.

2. Aspect Ratio

Ratio of the TV width compared to height. e.g. 16:9

3. Resolution More number of pixels = the greater the picture quality. e.g. 1920(H) x 1080(V)

The primary difference between Full HD and HD Ready TVs is resolution. Resolution of a Full HD TV is double of that of a HD Ready TV.



Resolution of Standard Definition (Conventional) TVs is 720 H x 480 V = less than 1 million pixels.



Resolution of HD Ready TVs is 1366 H x 768 V = 1 million pixels



Resolution of Full HD TVs is 1920 H x 1080 V = 2 million pixels.





* H = number of Horizontal pixels, V = number of vertical pixels





4. Dynamic Contrast Ratio The difference between the brightest whites and darkest blacks a TV can show. e.g. 1,000,000:1

5. Viewing Angle The max viewable angle when viewing left to right. LCD/LED TV which offers closer to 180* are better.

6. Edge lit LED Refers to the placements of LEDs along the edges of an LCD display. Due to such arrangements the edges might appear to be brighter than the rest of the picture. Edge lit panels are slimmer in dimensions but can also cause bleeding of light around the edges.

7. Full Array Refers to arrangement of LEDs which are placed in a full matrix or array, this gives constant and flat back-lighting.

8. Bleeding LCDs block out redundant light coming from their backlit source, bleeding happens when the back-light behind the LCD surface is not 100% blocked. This results some areas to appear lighter than the rest especially on a dark or black background. Fact is that, almost all LCDs suffer some amount of bleeding.

9. Response Time Latency or response rate means how quickly the screen can refresh a video image. It basically means the rate at which the LCD can display moving images. It is generally measured in milli seconds (ms) and you should look for TVs with faster response time. 10. Refresh Rate The number of times your LCD screen refreshes itself per second is known as refresh rate giving you clear, uninterrupted image. Generally the refresh rate is measured in Hertz(Hz). A refresh rate of 120 or 240 Hz refers to the number of times a frame is drawn each second. 11. Ambilight Philips is an Inventor of Ambilight, refers to the ambient light which is generated corresponding to the video content currently being played on the screen. This effect gives you a feel of a much larger and immersive TV screen.

12. Ghosting Appearance of a false image on the screen refers to ghosting. This generally happens when a previous image displayed on the screen can still be seen.

13. Bezel A bezel refers to the outside edges of a Liquid crystal display screen or any screen for that matter.

14. 1080i and 1080p displays Video mode displaying 1080 lines of vertical resolution is written in shorthand as 1080p, the ‘p’ stands for progressive scan where as on the other hand a 1080i display is shown in 16:9 aspect ratio which gives a screen resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. Here the i stands for interlaced.

15. Progressive scan Also known as non-interlaced scanning is a method of displaying or transmitting a video images in which all the lines of each frames are drawn in a sequence. 16. Interlaced video This form of transmitting or storing moving images scans only the odd lines, then the even lines of each frame are drawn alternately.

So, these are the common LCD/LED terms used by the manufacturers. The Ghosting, bleeding are problems that commonly seen in displays. I hope this article will be helpful for the next visit to a TV shop. Have a Happy Weekend.











