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Five things to do after buying an HDTV

Whether you’ve just bought your first HDTV, your second HDTV, or just shopping for an HDTV, here are some tips to get the most out of your new TV.

1. Use the correct inputs and cables

Most televisions offer a wide variety of inputs including composite video and audio that use yellow, red and white RCA connectors and provide the lowest quality signal and not HD. S-Video connectors that use round black connectors are a bit better, but still no HD. Component connections use 3 RCA connectors for video and 2 for audio, they’re still analog, but they’ll give you HD and are the next best thing to HDMI. The best is HDMI with its small rectangular connectors that provide a high-quality digital connection for audio and video.

Our advice is to use HDMI and avoid super cheap cables. On the other hand, don’t be fooled into buying expensive cables from the salesman at your local big box store. Most HDMI cables work fine for most programming, but some are better. What others. The only reason to spend the extra money is for a high speed (Category 2) cable used for “Deep Color” and lossless audio.

2. Adjust the lights in the room and eliminate glare

One of the easiest ways to make your TV look bad is to shine a lot of light on it creating reflections and glare. Plasma TVs are especially prone to glare problems, but LCD panels can also reflect light. Invest in a pair of curtains or place your TV in a room with few windows. Some experts recommend turning off the lights in the room and adding a dim light behind the TV.

3. Calibrate, Calibrate, Calibrate

If there was only one thing we could recommend to get the most out of your new TV, it would be to set the TV out of “showroom” mode and switch it to “your bedroom” mode. You can adjust things like brightness, contrast, and sharpness without a calibration disc, but discs (Blu-ray and DVD) aren’t very expensive. On the other hand, you could always consider hiring a professional, who would probably use some expensive equipment to give your TV a high-quality calibration.

Here are some options for DIY calibration. Remember, a Blu-ray calibration disc in a Blu-ray player will show the best test patterns.

Inexpensive and easy calibration

George Lucas has arranged for THX Certified DVDs to provide a set of calibration tools in the setup menu. If you don’t already own a THX DVD like “Star Wars,” try Netflix or your local library for one of the DVDs listed on this website. THX Optimizer will guide you through a set of test patterns so you can adjust contrast, brightness, color/hue, aspect ratio, and sharpness. In case you’re wrong, most TVs have default settings that you can use to restore factory settings.

Buy a calibration DVD

For around $25, you can invest in a calibration disk that can include a set of filters that you look through or hold against the screen to help set color levels. Spears & Munsil’s Blu-ray Calibration Disc gets high marks from users. Joe Kane’s Digital Video Essentials (DVE) is another popular one, as is the Monster/ISF HDTV Calibration Wizard. The tutorials on the discs explain how to perform the tests and what the tests mean.

Call a professional or buy your equipment

If you can pay around $300 to have a specialist from somewhere like Geek Squad come to your house, you’ll get someone trained in using professional equipment like this colorimeter that sucks in the front of your TV and provides feedback to adjust settings. You can always buy the gear they use, like this SpyderTV analyzer, which starts at around $100.

4.Add speakers

Good sound can make a big difference in how a picture looks. Don’t make the mistake of buying a good quality HDTV and then adding a poor quality set of speakers or home theater.

Studies have shown that viewers think the picture looks better when the audio sounds better. Most HDTVs have outputs for additional speakers. The first thing you should consider adding is a bass-boosting subwoofer. A good subwoofer will cost around $100. To get the full immersion effect of surround sound, you’ll need to purchase a set of speakers and place them around the room. A set of 5.1 speakers that includes a subwoofer could cost you a few hundred bucks for a decent set. Another option is a sound bar that sits below the front of your TV and “projects” simulated surround sound.

5. Mount it

Mounting your large flat screen TV may require more skill and tools than you have at hand, but a TV mounted on an articulating arm against your bedroom wall can not only make the TV look more attractive, it can even enhance the viewing experience as the articulated arms can extend from the wall and tilt to optimize the viewing angle. They can also make ports easier to access when you want to change connections on the back of your computer. Installers generally warn against mounting a TV too high to avoid a stiff neck from “stargazing.”

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