Freeview vs. Freeview HD?
Discussion
Is HD with Freeview as night and day as HD with Sky (given appropriate HD material)?
My mum's TV has packed up and needs replacing asap - I only use Sky HD as a source and don't have a Freeview HD tuner so can't really compare for myself and most of the store demos seem to use looped material rather than a "live" signal.
My mum's TV has packed up and needs replacing asap - I only use Sky HD as a source and don't have a Freeview HD tuner so can't really compare for myself and most of the store demos seem to use looped material rather than a "live" signal.
Yes its a lot better.
She would get 4 channels currently via Aerial
BBC1 BBC2 ITV and CH4
These like your sky box will appear on a different channel number for freeview HD these are 101 102 103 104
So if Mum is a bit take it or leave it or confused by tech you may find her sat there using 1 2 3 and 4 as per usual and wondering what all the HD fuss is about.
As HD tuners are pretty much the norm on branded tvs I would go for it, but just make sure you read the spec carefully theres a lot of confusion over HD HD ready, freeviewHD etc
She would get 4 channels currently via Aerial
BBC1 BBC2 ITV and CH4
These like your sky box will appear on a different channel number for freeview HD these are 101 102 103 104
So if Mum is a bit take it or leave it or confused by tech you may find her sat there using 1 2 3 and 4 as per usual and wondering what all the HD fuss is about.
As HD tuners are pretty much the norm on branded tvs I would go for it, but just make sure you read the spec carefully theres a lot of confusion over HD HD ready, freeviewHD etc
bristolracer said:
So if Mum is a bit take it or leave it or confused by tech you may find her sat there using 1 2 3 and 4 as per usual and wondering what all the HD fuss is about.
As HD tuners are pretty much the norm on branded tvs I would go for it, but just make sure you read the spec carefully theres a lot of confusion over HD HD ready, freeviewHD etc
God I'm making her sound like an old biddy As HD tuners are pretty much the norm on branded tvs I would go for it, but just make sure you read the spec carefully theres a lot of confusion over HD HD ready, freeviewHD etc
She already has an LCD TV with Freeview but the TV is about five years old.The challenge is that she doesn't want anything larger than 27/28" and there don't seem to be many of those that have Freeview HD.
This isn't Freeview HD but looks alright considering it's got the JL 5 year warranty on it http://www.johnlewis.com/samsung-ue28f4000-led-hd-...
Yes you are right hd is missing from the smaller TVs
If you can get her up to 32 inches it would open much greater options
If you look at the 32 inch ones these days they have very much smaller edging around the screen so you may find a new 32 is the same size as a 5 year old 28 inch
it comes down to budget and what she needs/wants.
If you can get her up to 32 inches it would open much greater options
If you look at the 32 inch ones these days they have very much smaller edging around the screen so you may find a new 32 is the same size as a 5 year old 28 inch
it comes down to budget and what she needs/wants.
We have a 32" as our main TV with built in Freesat HD. It also has Freeview HD and I can't see any difference between the two.
When the second BBC HD channel was a mixture of BBC2, 3 and 4 I would flip between HD and SD, SWMBO remarked how much better the picture was on HD when we caught the tail end of a show, in SD, after changing channel.
When the second BBC HD channel was a mixture of BBC2, 3 and 4 I would flip between HD and SD, SWMBO remarked how much better the picture was on HD when we caught the tail end of a show, in SD, after changing channel.
NH1 said:
The only problem with freeview HD is the HD channels are right at the far end of the on screen guide, so you have to flick through a few pages to find them. I know you can set favourites etc but why put them all the way there. I never use them for this reason.
First world problems eh 
(you could just type 101 instead)
I don't see the point in getting a non-HD Freeview set now. I got a Samsung 22in Smart 1080 HD to use in here as a TV / 2nd monitor and it cost £150. Admittedly it was a refurb from Tesco online (but all the protective plastic intact, remote batteries unused) but a current model with WiFi, iPlayer, YouTube etc.
Here are two unremarkable screen grabs I did to show the difference. Possibly not the best choice of show to explain the improvement:
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5530/10106386096_5e5...

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3698/10106385506_66e...

Anyone who thinks you can't see the difference with 1080 on a small monitor should be made to go back to using 1024x768 or 800x600 on their laptop.
Here are two unremarkable screen grabs I did to show the difference. Possibly not the best choice of show to explain the improvement:
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5530/10106386096_5e5...

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3698/10106385506_66e...

Anyone who thinks you can't see the difference with 1080 on a small monitor should be made to go back to using 1024x768 or 800x600 on their laptop.
You should be able to reorder the channels to put the 4 HD ones on 1,2,3 & 4 as I've done on a Sony in the kitchen and a Panasonic in the conservatory.That way you don't end up watching the SD versions. I also put the SD BBC 1 on channel 999 so that when BBC 1 HD goes to a red test card I can just go back one channel to watch the local news (BBC 1 HD can't yet show regional programs).
Also bare in mind that some TVs allow different settings depending on whether you are watching an SD channel or a HD one, so by sure to set them up the same if comparing as there really shouldn't be obvious differences in things like colours/greyscale between the two, merely extra detail from the HD one.
Also bare in mind that some TVs allow different settings depending on whether you are watching an SD channel or a HD one, so by sure to set them up the same if comparing as there really shouldn't be obvious differences in things like colours/greyscale between the two, merely extra detail from the HD one.
I use my Freeview HD PVR as a source for my projector so I make sure I record in HD wherever possible as the difference is huge on a large screen. In fact some programs aren't much different to BluRay quality along with pretty decent 5.1 Dolby Digital sound on many broadcasts which is better than ProLogic II decoded stereo sound from SD channels.
However on a smaller TV/longer viewing distances maybe not so significant.
However on a smaller TV/longer viewing distances maybe not so significant.
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hstewie said: