Plasma vs. LCD Television Screen
Many people do not realize that when they are choosing between a plasma TV and an LCD television screen that they are choosing between two complex and competing forms of technology. For this reason, it is important to realize the differences between the two so that a proper purchase can be made with all of the variables in mind. This ensures customer satisfaction and quality of product, overall, and maintains the focus on the market as a whole to ensure better quality products and a higher rate of product accountability from day one out of the factory.
Both the LCD television screen and the plasma screen are capable of achieving similar features with their functionality. They both offer bright, clear images on the screens and come in similar television packaging. The LCD television screen is even quickly closing the gap on pricing as it is being manufactured in such a way as to offer more competition to the plasma TV in the cost and pricing department. It is being created in similar size batches and it maintaining a presence on the marketplace that is more than ready for some serious competition.
Getting into Specifics
Without getting too serious about the topic, the differences between the plasma screen and the LCD television screen are multiple. The plasma screen consists of hundreds of individual pixel cells that allow electric pulses to excite gases like neon, thus causing the glowing light and the actual picture of the plasma screen. This light, from the plasma screen, produces the correct combination of colours that are necessary for the television to appear as it does and creates the proper balance as well. If you look closely at the plasma screen, you can actually see the individually coloured cells as they form the picture.
The LCD television screen display, on the other hand, comes from one source. A set of transistors supply voltage to liquid-crystal cells that are sandwiched between two sheets of glass. When these crystals are hit with energy or light, they “untwist” and emit a degree of white light that is then generated through a lamp behind the TV screen. The LCD television screen then produces the colours you see on a concept of subtracting all of the other unnecessary colour from the generation process. This creates the picture that you are used to on the LCD screen and represents a different process on the whole.