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LG ElectronicsTV/Audio/Video; TVs; 42LS5700 ... TV Support Landing Page - HDTV/Netcast/webOS 1.0/webOS 2.0 ... Adjusting Picture Settings - webOS 2.0 Video ... quality and convenience of complimentary shipping when buying directly from LG.com. ... Curved TVs · 22 Inch to 29 Inch Class TVs · 32 Inch to 39 Inch Class TVs · 40 Inch ...
Amazon.com, Inc.LG 42LS5700 42-Inch 1080p 120Hz LED-LCD HDTV with Smart TV (2012 Model). byLG. Size: 42-Inch ..... images are nice and crisp when viewing HD content.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbZncfiOXQA
Jul 13, 2011 - Uploaded by FixItUrselfDummy
Fix your tv with black screen blinking light, popping sound noise. ... Watch QueueQueue ... TV Black Screen - Repair LCD LED PLASMA - Problems SONY LG .... I have a 60 inch samsung DPL tv how can I stop the humming or ... What do I do if my tvturns on but its just a black screen so sound no picture?.
basketball game is a fast moving object which is hard to take the picture perfectly sometimes
always using a flash, or external flash for more lighting support, set the shutter at about 1/80 or faster, ISO setting is 400 to avoid darker result, the Aperture should be set at the biggest number such as f 1,4
This is often called the "Soap Opera" effect...I had a similar problem and found that changing the settings helped tremendously. Here are the settings I use: Picture Mode: Movie
Advanced Video
Noise Reduction: strong
Color enhancement: off
Advanced Adaptive Luma: Off
Enhanced Contrast Rato: off
Color Temperature: Normal
Red: 121
Green: 128
Blue: 118
Smooth Motion Effect: low
Real Cinema Mode: Precision
Also, there's a great thread on the Soap Opera effect here: http://www.hometheaterforum.com/forum/thread/291611/the-soap-opera-effect-on-modern-displays
I would advise calling your LG dealer to arrange a service engineer to check which software version is running in the TV. It could be currently on an older version & requires to be updated, this can usually solve picture resolution problems.
The noise reduction option will cause a blur on fast movement. Also, you probably already know this, but a standard definition broadcast will look very blurry on an HD TV, so make sure the channel you're watching is actually an HD channel.
Oh, wow, I just noticed that this is from October. Oh well, maybe you're still having problems.
This is probably a combination of 2 things. In both causes 1 and 2 below, I would suggest checking the TV with a BluRay Player with BluRay disc connected using an HDMI Cable. If you complain about this, then the TV is probably not that great. Expect a $200 jump to a better model at the least (but this depends on what you have now). Honestly, this is fairly normal and wont change much with the next TV.
CAUSE 1: Motion BLUR
Motion blur occurs when fast moving objects are displayed on LCD TVs. Basically, it takes time for the LED lights that make up the picture to turn ON and OFF, when and object shown on the TV is moving faster than the LCD TV can turn these lights ON and OFF, you see the trail left behind as the lights dim to OFF. This look like blur because you see the current image and the trail of the old images. 120HZ and 240HZ LCD TV are supposed to improve this but honestly, they are at times 300+ dollars more and not really worth it. Very little difference except in some few cases.
CAUSE 2: Digital TV
Digital signals are hit or miss. Good or BAD. If you are watching Cable, Satelite or Antenna; it is likely you are seeing some BLOCK NOISE. This block noise is caused by missing information or Noise in the video signal. This will cause the picture to Pixilate (you see blocks and things start looking blurry too). This happens with poor signals. This also happens with the HD channels when they have more information than bandwidth (more data than that have space to send it...image shoving an elephant into a VolksWagon Beetle)
There is no easy (read: cheap) solution for this. Especially because your TV is so big, the only thing that will look good on it is something that plays at the very least 720p HD output.
I don't know what your DVD player model is, but you want an upconverting DVD player, and even then, the quality will not be full HD. The only thing that is full 1080p HD on the market today is Blu-Ray, and game consoles like XBox 360 and PS3.
As for the sports, it depends on the TV you bought. If the deal was too good to be true for a 52" TV, you probably got one with a low Hz, or a high refresh rate. This means that the images played don't update quick enough for high motion video like action movies and sports, which is why it's blurry. Mine has a 3ms response time, by comparison.
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