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SportTrac Discussion
General Sport Trac Discussion
anyone drive a hybrid ?
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<blockquote data-quote="Richard L" data-source="post: 896658" data-attributes="member: 52972"><p>Actually the LCD uses much less energy however the flourecent backlight for the LCDs are probably the bigh energy hog. I think that is why Samsung came out with their LED TV's. They are conventional LCD panels, but are backlight by an array of White LED's. The advantage is that the LEDs use less power and each LED can be dimmed independently. They are highly rated TV's, But they are more expensive</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I have a new 55" LG LCD flat panel TV that has energy saving modes, that allows you to dim the backlight brightness to standard, Maximum, mid-level and minimum. The display tells you just what percentage of savings you getting at that setting. At Mid-level and minimum brighrness levels, the picture is pretty dim, so those settings do not appear to be very usable.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>...Rich</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Richard L, post: 896658, member: 52972"] Actually the LCD uses much less energy however the flourecent backlight for the LCDs are probably the bigh energy hog. I think that is why Samsung came out with their LED TV's. They are conventional LCD panels, but are backlight by an array of White LED's. The advantage is that the LEDs use less power and each LED can be dimmed independently. They are highly rated TV's, But they are more expensive I have a new 55" LG LCD flat panel TV that has energy saving modes, that allows you to dim the backlight brightness to standard, Maximum, mid-level and minimum. The display tells you just what percentage of savings you getting at that setting. At Mid-level and minimum brighrness levels, the picture is pretty dim, so those settings do not appear to be very usable. ...Rich [/QUOTE]
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SportTrac Discussion
General Sport Trac Discussion
anyone drive a hybrid ?
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