Bush 15.4-inch HD LCD TV Austin TX

Bush's new LCD TV can play a lot of different roles. It has a built-in tuner, so you can use it as a TV set; a VGA socket, so you can use it as a PC monitor; and a range of other video inputs.

Local Companies

Bond's Television & Electronics Inc
(512) 961-4771
1010 West Lynn St
Austin, TX
A & A Appliance & Electronics
(512) 453-6126
4729 Burnet Rd
Austin, TX
A & B TV
(512) 454-4534
1912 W Anderson Ln
Austin, TX
Giant Discount Appliances & TV
(512) 454-7979
7521 N Lamar Blvd
Austin, TX
Best Buy
(512) 322-2047
1201 Barbara Jordan Blvd
Austin, TX
Beta Electronics
(512) 416-0606
6608 S Congress Ave
Austin, TX
Affordable Electronics
(512) 249-7100
10700 Anderson Mill Rd Ste 130
Austin, TX
AAPCO Electronics
(512) 338-2900
2121 Parmer Ln Suite 106
Austin, TX
Arrow HD Television Repair
(512) 835-1600
2121 W Parmer Lane Ste 106
Austin, TX
Giant Discount Appliances & TV
(512) 474-4268
2120 N Mays St #200
Austin, TX

Provided By:

Bush's new LCD TV can play a lot of different roles. It has a built-in tuner, so you can use it as a TV set; a VGA socket, so you can use it as a PC monitor; and a range of other video inputs. It even has an HDMI connector, enabling it to deliver true 720-line resolution from an HD video player or PlayStation 3. Yet it's lightweight and compact, and easy to use with the well-designed remote. The built-in speakers aren't thunderous, but loud and clear enough for most living rooms.

The picture from the TV tuner is sharp and bright from head-on, but as with many LCD panels, vertical viewing angle is limited: stand up and the picture looks washed out. The backlighting seems uneven, too, so the bottom of the picture is slightly brighter than the top.

Bush advertises this as a true HD display, but the screen's so small you'll hardly notice unless you watch from very close up. And you do need to be using HDMI to get the benefit: connect an analogue source (such as a DVD player or a Nintendo Wii) and, no matter which socket you use, the picture becomes smeary and fuzzy. Many LCD TVs have difficulty scaling analogue video to fit their native resolutions, but this is particularly poor. There's no zoom feature, either, so if your input sources aren't in widescreen you're stuck with black bars at the sides.

Connected to a PC, the TV gives a clear enough picture for occasional use, but it's nowhere near as bright as a proper monitor. Its native resolution of 1,280 x 800 isn't supported by all graphics cards, so you may end up with a slightly stretched or compressed picture. There's no DVI socket, although you can use a DVI-to-HDMI cable to get the best definition.

If all you want is a tiny TV with HDMI, this is a budget option. But it isn't ideal if you plan to watch analogue video sources too.

System Specifications

Screen size: 15.4in;

Resolution: 1,280 x 800;

Inputs: RF, SCART, S-Video, Composite, VGA, HDMI, audio;

Size: 350 x 470 x 100mm;

Weight: 4kg

Verdict

A tiny HD telly that can work as a monitor too. A good price for an HDMI display, but overall it undershoots its potential.

Author: Darien Graham-Smith

Computer Buyer Online

Featured Local Company

Bond's Television & Electronics Inc

(512) 961-4771
1010 West Lynn St
Austin, TX
http://www.bondstv.com

Related Local Event
2009 IEEE International Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility - EMC 2009
Dates: 8/17/2009 - 8/21/2009
Location: Austin Convention Center
Austin, TX
View Details