Hi Mcbain, I'l try some answers with your questions
a) Yes you will need to get a Blue-Ray DVD player
b) On my HD TV I have an HDMI point and lead going from my HDMI DVD player to the HD TV. I think you will need a DVI lead to get HD, but there must be a point on your HDTV to accept and HD source, such as HD cable or Satellite. hmm, have you checked the manuel for the TV and see what it says regarding outside HD Sources?
c) Yes PAL anamorphic does look better then NTSC anamorphic however it seems that most studio's produce their best PQ on NTSC releases. One thing to be wary of with PAL releases is PAL speedup which is where the sound has been sped up to match the new qualities for the PAL presentation (PAL has more visual lines then that of NTSC which equals in improved picture quality but also a shorter run length and the sound has to be adjusted accordingly)
I know C may sound a bit jumbled and I apologies but I hope I have gone some way in answering your questions.
Hey Cigar Joe..
Thanks for the info. My HDTV has compenent video inputs (2 sets) the 3 color RCA inputs for progressive scan. When a progressive DVD player with compenent outputs is plugged in the screen say's (480p). My question is can a component (3 color cable) carry a 720p or 1080i coming from a Blue Ray player. My manual does not say. The Model Monitor I have is a Philips 30PWH850 HDTV CRT.
One thing to check is...does a Blu-ray player have component video outs and DVI or just DVI. The component video outs on DVD players today are for prgressive scan at 480p.
There is a HD TV cable plug in on the back? We do not use this HDTV for cable TV programs only DVD movies. Just a thought if this is the only true HDTV input (for cable TV) will the Blu-ray player plug into this location somehow?
What is HDMI point and lead??
I was aware of the 4% speedup which really bothers me and futhermore...why would they allow such a thing in the first place??
Cheers,
Eric