http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... blitz.html
so the EU are considering getting rid of worst, most power hungry plasma screens, although the wording at the start of the mail would imply all nice tellies being banned and all their readers are screaming about how evil the EU is and how its all a con. Not that they shitstir of course.
I did wonder a few years ago when there was something on Breakfast about "flat screens use more power" which I was confused about as the LCD ones use less. So what type of screens are these? I take it they are the old fashioned type and the newer ones are getting better?
No more inefficent plasma screens
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Here's hoping this will drive OLED screens forward to the mass market faster than we're seeing. They are very efficient - but I'm not sure of they've overcome the size limitations.
They've known about inefficient plasmas since they were created - perhaps they delayed this legislation long enough to make sure all MEPs have got one now.
Not that I'm a cynic.
They've known about inefficient plasmas since they were created - perhaps they delayed this legislation long enough to make sure all MEPs have got one now.
Not that I'm a cynic.
I love that anyone who sends in a vaguely sensible comment get's it voted down. Like the bloke who mentioned the more power your TV uses, the more money you have to give your electricity supplier.
Currently on a rating of -25...
Currently on a rating of -25...
My 37" plasma uses only very slightly more than the 28" CRT it replaced. I'd contend that it uses less electricity than a 37" CRT would, should one be available. LCDs are generally a bit less power hungry than plasma, but given that I prefer the picture quality on a plasma than LCD (gap closing I admit), I'm happy to pay an extra few quid a year on the power cost.
I'm not even going to read the article as I know it will make me cross.
Just mention energy saving light bulbs to a Daily Mail reader and they'll be out hoarding 100w bulbs in the time it takes to say "weekly bin collection".
I'm not even going to read the article as I know it will make me cross.
Just mention energy saving light bulbs to a Daily Mail reader and they'll be out hoarding 100w bulbs in the time it takes to say "weekly bin collection".
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On average, the power consumption of a cathode-ray screen is 3.4 watts per screen inch, while plasma uses 9.4 watts per screen inch - based on figures from 2005. LCD falls somewhere (on the high end) between the two. Phillips did bring out an "eco-friendly" 42" LCD but, crucially, the screens are getting bigger all the time, so any energy savings are negated when you move up to a 46, 48 or 50" +Sput wrote:The article is poorly written (SHOCKING) but isn't it saying plasmas are a no no but LCDs are okay? If so, is this a problem for most people? I thought plasma was dying out.
Its difficult to make fair comparisons to CRT televisions, as they are nowhere near as large in screen size - and of course the public now have an expectation that "large television" equates to a mammoth 50".
It remains to be seen how much energy a large OLED tv will use - but it will certainly be less than LCD/plasma - and may be more on par with CRT.
It's the backlight that uses most of the power though, right? So it doesn't HAVE to be OLED, just LED backlight. In principle that will work better as you're at full brightness straight away, have longer product lifetimes and low power consumption.
That's not to say OLED won't be fab.
That's not to say OLED won't be fab.
Knight knight
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I though the problem was getting past 30" - so that would seem to suggest that they've surmounted the technical problems - but of course manufacture will be expensive to set up initially. They'll probably start with a common manufacturing site for many brands as they did with plasma.nodnirG kraM wrote:I've been somewhat out of touch in this area recently - the largest on the consumer market is Samsung's 40", isn't it?Gavin Scott wrote:Here's hoping this will drive OLED screens forward to the mass market faster than we're seeing. They are very efficient - but I'm not sure of they've overcome the size limitations.
Yes a fair proportion of the energy consumption is in the backlight for LCD, but its not the only factor. I've seen LED backlit screens, but I think they also use fluorescent and maybe even cold cathode.Sput wrote:It's the backlight that uses most of the power though, right? So it doesn't HAVE to be OLED, just LED backlight. In principle that will work better as you're at full brightness straight away, have longer product lifetimes and low power consumption.
That's not to say OLED won't be fab.
Even with LED arrays, you're looking at 0.3 Watt per diode per inch - so it also adds up when you get to large screens. Fine if you've got a 20" desk monitor, not so fine for your cinema sized main telly.
OLED - its the only way forward.
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You're taking the diagonal screen size and multiplying by 0.3.Sput wrote:I don't understand your units there. Do you mean 0.3W per diode or per inch? If it's per inch it seems rather good; 42" only takes about 13W.
You need an area measurement. Length x Height x 0.3. Its very much more than 13 watts.