Film, Media & TV4 mins ago
3D TV
29 Answers
I have finally succumbed to temptation and bought an Panasonic 42GT20B. 3D, so get ready for a barrage of questions in the very near future on how to do this and that. It was a good deal with Curry`s that I couldn`t resist, this included a Blue Ray and 5.1 surround sound, two pairs of 3D specs, and two special cables, total cost incl delivery £1,540.94. Who say`s times is hard? I`m now going to have a lie down and get rid of a thumping headache, OOOOwwwwwwwwwwww.
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He got it through an insurance claim after the Wii remote ended up through the screen of his old TV so I'm not sure they would have put any extras in for him. I think he said some places were doing them for about £45 but he wasnt sure of the quality. I just can't fathom how they could cost that much.
very nice, carlton :) and a great price.
Milly, we got ours because of an insurance claim but our insurers werent going to be so generous, offered us a £500 tv to replace decent one that got broken. Luckily we managed to negotiate at £1200 pay off instead and put towards the 3d.
The glasses are expensive as they arent the type that you get at cinema. They work by shutting off the lens on each eye hundreds of times a second (or something) whilst the tv changes image at same rate so that each eye sees a different angle but at a rate so fast that the change isnt noticable.
Milly, we got ours because of an insurance claim but our insurers werent going to be so generous, offered us a £500 tv to replace decent one that got broken. Luckily we managed to negotiate at £1200 pay off instead and put towards the 3d.
The glasses are expensive as they arent the type that you get at cinema. They work by shutting off the lens on each eye hundreds of times a second (or something) whilst the tv changes image at same rate so that each eye sees a different angle but at a rate so fast that the change isnt noticable.