- Last updated: Friday, 7 November
- Adoos Reference: 3933683
- Location:
Victoria
Description
Bring vibrantly lifelike video to your home theater with the 42-inch Audiovox FPE4216P plasma HDTV, which offers a slimmer fit thanks to the two detachable side-mounted speakers and removable tilting base (which enables you to mount the set to a wall with optional VESA-compatible hardware). This set has a built-in 181-channel NTSC tuner as well as an ATSC tuner for over-the-air HD reception. You can also view high-definition programming (1080i/720p/480p/480i) when connected to an optional receiver or cable/satellite set-top box via the component video inputs. It also offers pure digital audio/video connectivity via a single cable with the HDMI input.
The FPE4216P has a 1024 x 768-pixel resolution, 16:9 widescreen aspect ratio, 165-degree viewing angle, and excellent 1200:1 contrast ratio. (The higher the contrast ratio, the greater a TV's ability to display subtle color details and not get washed out by ambient room light.)
The 3D digital comb filter constantly analyzes the three dimensions of picture height, picture width, and picture changes-over-time, to reduce dramatically edge image artifacts while improving transition detail. This set also performs automatic 3:3/2:2 pulldown detection--a handy feature for watching progressive-scan movie programs in their native 24-frame format. To adapt 24 frames-per-second movies to 30 fps video, frames in the original movie must be duplicated; 3:2 pulldown digitally corrects this duplication by removing the redundant information to display a frame-accurate picture.
It also features Faroudja's Emmy award-winning DCDi (Directional Correlational Deinterlacing) technology, which helps to eliminate the jagginess found in non-HD video content. FaroudjaÕs unique DCDi algorithm identifies all the moving edges in a scene and adjusts the angle of interpolation at each pixel so that the interpolation always follows the edge instead of crossing it, eliminating staircasing or jagged edge artifacts


