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Samsung HLN617W 61-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology

Jul.14, 2011 in Home DLP Product

Tags: 61Inch, HDTV, HLN617W, projection, Samsung, technology, Widescreen

3 Comments on “Samsung HLN617W 61-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology”

  1. Hoelo
    July 14th, 2011 at 02:39
    127 of 127 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    DLP vs LCD is a give and take – See both and decide.., April 4, 2004
    By 
    Hoelo (Falls Church, VA USA) –
    This review is from: Samsung HLN617W 61-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology (Electronics)

    When I bought my new house, I decided that my basement needed a MONSTER tv to make me feel all spiffy and like a big man :P . The choice for me was between the 70″ Sony Grand Wega XBR and this 61″ Samsung DLP.

    DLP and LCD both have their pros and cons.. Seeing the two TVs at Circuit City (where I got mine) nearly side-by-side gave me the opportunity to notice things that I might not have remembered otherwise had I bounced back and forth between stores to make my decision.

    Either TV is great.. These are both top of the line sets and you really can’t go wrong.. However, here are a few things that I noticed.. And be aware, different people see different things so your mileage may vary..

    LCD Pro: The LCD was very slightly crisper in general. For the most part, you couldn’t tell the difference. However, there were certain cases where you could see a slightly sharper image on the LCD; namely the TV logos in the bottom right corner of the screen and the edges of cetain images. The picture was stunning and the black-depth was quite good, although not quite as deep as on the DLP.

    DLP Pro: I am a big video game player, animation fan and movie buff. Video games and anime tend to have very rich colors since, after all, it is artificially generate.. In video games you will seen greens and blues that you rare ever come across in your life. In the color area, the DLP shines.. While the Sony XBR color was such that you could not criticize it in any way really, the DLP just blew it out of the water. The color on the DLP is *perfect*.. There is no over-saturation or bleed-through.. Colors are crisp, distinct and beautiful. The blacks are JET black.. Top notch.. Another huge plus, although irrelevant for most, is that the Samsung actually has an XGA port in the back, allowing me to hook a computer up to it directly so as to surf the web from my sofa.

    DLP Con: As some people have noted, DLP really exposes flaws in your source.. If you have an ‘iffy’ signal quality, the DLP will make you aware of that. For me this was a non-issue as I bought the Monster Powerbar and the Samsung DVI progressive-scan DVD player.. Since I have a great-quality digital cable feed here, the images look perfect.

    LCD Con: This was the killer. Some people do not notice it, but I did and it ruled out the Sony. LCD has a problem with ‘motion blur’ when there is fast motion taking place on the screen. This is VERY VERY slight.. so slight that even with movies, you are unlikely to notice it. However, as I stood perusing the TVs, the demo-disc cycled to a college football game.. And there it was.. On a long 50-yard pass, as well as a breakaway run, there was clear motion blur around the ball and the athletes.. The LCD just cannot keep up with the image at that level of speed.

    As a huge sports nut (FOOTBALL!), this killed it for me..

    So, again, you can’t go wrong with these TVs. I was all set to spend the extra $2,300 to get the extra 9″ of screen, since I do love Sony products.. But that motion blur killed it for me and I happily plunked down the money and took home my Samsung.. I have been COMPLETELY satisfied with it.

    NOTE: Do yourself a favor.. Buy this locally (sorry Amazon) and get the extended warranties.. I never buy those but on LCD and DLP TVs, it will pay for itself.. CC’s was $499 for a 4 year extension that covers bulb replacement as many times as you call it in.. Bulb replacement can run $200-$300 and is recommended every 2000 or so hours.. So, the extended plan will pay for itself over the life of your TV.

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  2. H. Sachan
    July 14th, 2011 at 02:57
    42 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    The new ones are out now…., August 25, 2004
    By 
    H. Sachan (Seattle, WA United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Samsung HLN617W 61-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology (Electronics)

    Here’s a feedback which I left for HLP model TVs also. HLNs are older thatn HLP and the feedback below compares HLP/HLN/HLM. It does not has the nunmber of input/output (composite/component etc) since that can easily be found on the product description page.

    This reviews pretty much applies to all the DLP level TVs from Samsung. I researched for around more than couple of months before finally buying this one.

    Samsung initially started with HLM/HLN series DLP models which were using HD2 chip from Texas Instruments and the contrast ratio was 1000:1. This performed very well in reviews, quality and black level as compared to Sony LCD rear projection.

    The next series is the latest on which is HLP xx63 series where xx is the size in diagonal (HLP 4663, HLP 5063). The improvements in this are 7 segment color wheel instead of 6-segment, which gives better color. This also uses 3rd generation chip HD3 which has contrast ratio of 1500:1. The bulb are also better in this one since there were some problems in the earlier version of the TV. This is a great TV, light weight as compared to some other and plasmas.

    The next series which is out only in 2 models is HLP 5085 and HLP5685. These are also 7-segment color wheel but they have HD2+ chip. This is 4th generation chip and is better than HD3. Its contrast ratio is 2500:1 which should mean better black levels. These are the ones with pedestal which looks cool in the picture but is kinda bulky looking in the store. I’m not sure why this model is not out in 46 inches, may be it doesn’t make difference in smaller sizes.

    Next, 5th generation chip is going to be xHD3 and should give around 4500:1 contrast ratio.

    Overall, DLPs are better since they have better contrast than plasmas and weigh less. They also don’t have a burn-in issue like plasmas. HLP series is the best one till now and Samsung is the oldest player in this.

    Other manufacturers are also catching up, so this should drive the price down further. good for consumers.

    Hope this helps and good luck shopping.

    ——–
    Some more feedback on the picture and input modes after two weeks into the purchase:

    The contrast ratio of HLN/HLP series are good provided you are watching the TV at the same height. If you watch from slightly above/below or left/right, then you’ll see it slightly less bright. Just like a laptop screen behaves, maye slightly better.

    It has following picture modes:
    - 4:3 standard definition (SD) cable programming. puts black bars on the side of the picture if you watch it in this mode.
    - wide mode (16:9). if you watch SD tv on this mode, it’ll stretch the picture
    - panorama mode. stretches only the outside portion of the picture making center of the picture in the correct proporting (aspect ratio) but the sides bit distorted
    - zoom1/zoom2: they just soom in from the center with different stretching methods.

    Component inputs (in SD and HD) aspect ratios only have normal and wide options. Normal being a little pinched, while wide is normal.

    —–
    Some more feedback after 5 weeks of purchase.

    I started seeing some problems with the lamp. The manual says that when the bulb/lamp needs replacement, all the three lights on the front switch will start blinking. Atleast couple of times a day, the following was happening:
    - when I switch on the TV, the lamp will try to bring the picture while the audio was there
    - after couple of seconds tv will go to standby mode
    - it’ll turn on again after couple of seconds and try to bring up the picture
    - and go again the loop to standby mode

    something this happens 3-4 times and the pictures comes and sometime it just gives up and the tv turns off.

    I’m glad that I bought the warranty after couple of weeks from Circuit city itself, otherwise lamps are not covered in one year Sammy warranty.

    … to be continued …

    updated on 12/19:
    The TV has been working great ever since, no complains what so ever. I’ve also tried playing DVD and asf format movies on the laptop connected to the TV thru 25pin monitor cable and stereo audio cables, and it all works fine.

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  3. Anonymous
    July 14th, 2011 at 03:01
    42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Great TV , but buy the extended warranty, March 31, 2004
    By A Customer
    This review is from: Samsung HLN617W 61-Inch Widescreen Projection HDTV with DLP Technology (Electronics)

    Firstly, I love the TV. I bought it because I wanted good contrast, bright colors, and no burn-in (I play a lot of X-Box games) and it delivers all those. But I’m giving it only three stars because it’s just not very reliable.
    - it is incredibly sensitive to signal quality. I have digital cable; there was heavy snow on many channels and I was getting dropouts – the channel suddenly missing – on the others. The cable company diagnosed a bad ground line, replaced it, and everything was fine. But during the entire time, my spare TV (CRT) looked perfectly fine – no snow, no dropout. So it’s this TV that’s sensitive.
    - It needs a lot of service. It blew the lamp (a $239 dollar part) after three months, the color wheel after six, and now, at 11 months, it’s just blown the lamp again. I’m about to get a warranty replacement of the whole light engine.I am kicking myself for not buying a 3-year extended warranty from the dealer.

    And just as a FYI, I bought Samsungs HDTV DVD player and use the DVI conenction and the picture quality is awesome.

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