Samsung updates DLPs, reinvents the wheel
By David Katzmaier, CNET.com on 06 January 2006
![]() Samsung HL-S5679W | |
CES 2006: DLP HDTV heavy-hitter Samsung announced four new big-screen rear-projection units at CES and, in terms of potential image-quality improvement, the coolest is the HL-S5679W.
This 56-inch single-chip 1080p-resolution DLP uses an entirely new light engine that ditches the tried-and-true colour wheel/lamp system for a trio of LEDs. The result is elimination of the rainbow effect that causes some viewers of DLP TVs to see brief trails of colour in certain circumstances. The LED light source also has other benefits, according to Samsung, including the ability to let the TV display a wider colour gamut; longer life before needing replacement (20,000 hours vs. 3,000 to 6,000 hours for a typical DLP bulb); and much shorter time to turn on -- 7 seconds -- than typical bulb-based HDTVs.
We spoke to Samsung's rep about the new TV, and he informed us that the company would only be producing a 56-inch model this year. He had no information about pricing on replacement LED light sources, but we assume they'll cost more than today's US$300-to-US$500 bulbs -- but then again, 20,000 hours is a really long time. He also claimed that the new engine can produce brighter images than the current lamps -- a surprise to us, since we'd heard that LED-powered front projectors, for example, were dimmer than their bulb-powered counterparts.
We were also surprised, especially given the price difference between standard flat-panel LCDs and their new LED-backlit equivalents, that the price tag for HL-S5679W isn't terribly exorbitant at US$4,199 list (available in April).
Aside from its LED light engine, the HL-S5679W shares a similar feature set with the company's 2006 seventh-generation 1080p DLPs announced at the show. The 50-inch HL-S5087W (US$2,899 list), the 56-inch HL-S5678W (US$3,199), and the 61-inch HL-S687W (US$3,599) will all be available in April. Major features include dual 1080p-compatible HDMI inputs and CableCard. They also feature a Game Mode said to provide enhanced response time and improved dark-area performance, but we'll take those claims with a big grain of salt. We expect to hear about more DLP models from Samsung soon, to replace the company's 2005 rear-projection lineup.
For the complete round up of stories from CES 2006, click here.
Topics: tv, samsung, rear, ces2006, dlp, projection, led, bulb
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Comments (3)
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Simon Savva commented on 09/02/2009 23:34 Report abuse
Seems these are nigh on impossible to find in Australia. In some respects it seems we are really being neglected with the latest dlps. I would love to buy one of these but will probably settle on the PS50A450 having features I want inc 3D but only 720p
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pospisil commented on 18/02/2007 12:35 Report abuse
please tell me where I can buy a samesung HL-S5679W led dlp tv
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Sandra4006 commented on 17/01/2007 08:01 Report abuse
Great site, lots of information, truly awesome TV - is this the future?
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