Don't chase these silly features that make little/no difference, the Bravia sync/upconversion. The biggest difference you can make with your equipment set is to *get real speakers for TV/movie viewing*. Do this before anything else. Upgrade to a 2 zone receiver if you need different music outside from what is playing inside, without reverting to TV speakers.
post #31 of 43
8/20/09 at 8:42am
The TV will upconvert anything not already upconverted by the source devices or the receiver. So no, there isn't value, unless the processing chip is substantially better than the one in the TV, which isn't likely in the inexpensive models. It's a 3 way contest between video processing chips (TV vs. receiver vs. DVD/Tivo), and differences won't usually be much. Marketers like to hype this because most people don't really understand that the TV already upconverts, also because they don't understand that "upconversion" doesn't really *add* anything to the picture, it certainly doesn't increase sharpness, make SD anything close to HD. It's more a battle of what *does least damage* in zooming the picture to fill the screen. For best picture quality stick to HD sources, HD channels on the Tivo, Blu-rays for movies.
Don't chase these silly features that make little/no difference, the Bravia sync/upconversion. The biggest difference you can make with your equipment set is to *get real speakers for TV/movie viewing*. Do this before anything else. Upgrade to a 2 zone receiver if you need different music outside from what is playing inside, without reverting to TV speakers.
Don't chase these silly features that make little/no difference, the Bravia sync/upconversion. The biggest difference you can make with your equipment set is to *get real speakers for TV/movie viewing*. Do this before anything else. Upgrade to a 2 zone receiver if you need different music outside from what is playing inside, without reverting to TV speakers.





They only reach to about 80Hz but what they *do* have should sound excellent, plus they look awesome, something you usually only see in an architectural magazine.