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It sounds that the width of the picture to your TV is more than normal. There are two reasons for this fault. If the width adjustment data value in its service menu mode has been misaligned or the output DC voltage from the main power regulator is more than normal. You can determine which among the condition stated above is now effected to your TV Just look at the picture. If the width and height of the picture is seem to be more than normal, make sure that the power regualtor section circuit has the fault. If the dimension of the picture is affected to its width only, [excess than normal] the data value with service mode should be checked. Also note the position of the picture. If the picture position has moved so much than normal, ether towards left in this case, you have to adjust the picture position. Anyway, it will be best to contact any experienced service technician, since, service mode entry and data adjustment are skilled work.
Hello, I need some more details so I can help, whether the image has grown in height or width? Or that the picture has grown at once, even height and width together? In addition I need the TV model, it says on the sticker at the back of the TV.
The image you are trying to view is very big. Please reduce the size of the image. (Dimensions width and height) I have an Moto phone and it can do images up to 1280x960 but larger ones are a pain. I have tried with 2048x1536 to no avail (standard 3.0mp digital camera) just to give you an example.
Also
another possibilty is that actual size of the image is too big. (Very slim chance) for
example an uncompressed BMP image can easily be 2,3,5 Mbytes in size
(if this is the case please compress to JPEG,or GIF format first to 60/70% quality)
Phones have limitations to the above two things and cannot handle very difficult tasks.
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You may be able to adjust the picture width and height if there are
controls. Look at the back of the set for holes labeled V.Size and or
H.Size, these are the Horizontal and Vertical size controls. You'll
need a small screwdriver (3/16) to insert into the control and adjust.
If there are no controls then it may need to be serviced as there are
capacitors that have failed which are causing the picture to change
size.
Picture resolution is the total number of pixels in your picture (those little colored dots when you look really really close). It's expressed in megapixels and is simply the product of the number of pixels in the width of the picture times the number of pixels in the length. For example, a 7.1 MP camera takes images with a resolution of 3072 pixels width by 2304 pixels height ( 7.1MP = 3072 x 2304).
Pixels/inch refers to the resolution of your picture on some external viewing device (printer, computer monitor, etc...). It has nothing to do with the settings on your camera. It's equal to the number of pixels in the picture divided by the width of the displayed picture on the device. For example, an 8 x 10" printed picture has a width of 10 inches. If I wanted to take full advantage of my 7.1 MP picture by printing it as an 8x10, then I should look for a printer capable of printing 707,789 pixels/inch. Now I'm pretty sure there's no printer currently capable of this feat.
The example above shows that the rush for more megapixels is not necessarily where consumers or camera manufacturers should be focusing their attention. Most people really only need something around the 3MP range for printouts or display on their monitor screens.
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