Samsung HLN4365W 43-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology
Amazon.com
Samsung’s DLP-based HLN4365W projection television will thrill you with its amazingly slender 15-inch profile and broad, 43-inch display, whose widescreen format is specially configured to accommodate the native aspect ratios of favorite movies. Its small size and relatively light weight (under 70 pounds) free you to try it out in different parts of a home before settling on the spot that’s right for you. What is DLP? DLP, or Digital Light Processing, is a technology that bounces a colored light beam across an array of hundreds of thousands of hinge-mounted microscopic mirrors attached to a single chip, called a “micro mirror device” (below, pictured with the head of a pin). Each of the mirrors can be pointed toward or away from the light source thousands of times per second, providing not only minute color detail but also sharper resolution than even LCD displays. This isn’t a garden-variety projection set. DLP, or Digital Light Processing technology (developed by Texas Instruments) allows purely digital connections between video sources and the projection system in front of you. The HLN4365W uses a second-generation (HD-2) DMD Chip, which–combined with Samsung’s light-processing optics–re (more…)
August 16th, 2009 at 5:49 pm
Poorly designed
If you want a trouble free set stay away from Samsung. These units have a color wheel, 3 fans and a 250 dollar lamp that need to be replaced periodically.
August 16th, 2009 at 7:24 pm
Was Great the 1st year and a half
Was Great the 1st year and a half
, then started getting flashing lights across the screen, they say we need a new light engine at –wait for it–$1500.
August 16th, 2009 at 7:54 pm
Expensive and supposedly bad customer service
I just got the tv yesterday from Sears; actually a floor model and hence the price was less than usual. Definitely an improvement from the behemoth Toshiba that I had.
August 17th, 2009 at 1:29 am
Hay dudes go for this one and stop wasting your time
I just purchased this product and had some concern because of a couple of the ratings given. After a couple of days rerunning wires from my DVD, VCR, Audio System and of course…
August 17th, 2009 at 4:50 am
picture tilt
Letters move downward from the bottom right to the bottom left and I understand this is picture tilt.
August 17th, 2009 at 10:37 am
Excellent picture
This TV uses the DLP technology…you get HDTV quality, but not the heavy, deep TV set and not the exorbitant prices of plasma TVs.