1-5 of 5 Answers
Hi this LG TV is not 1080, as the description says it is 720. 1080 is better, but on smaller TV's you really can't tell the difference. You will also pay more money for a 1080 TV.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This TV does not support 1080p resolution. The description states that it is a 720p TV. 720p is the standard set for HD, 1080p is the standard for Full HD with 1080i being just below that, and the next echelon up from that is 4K which is 4x the resolution of 720p. The resolution is based on the number of pixels per square inch of the display's panel as a standard, note that if you see a distinction for ppi, that will give you the true count of pixels per inch rather than the resolution standard that was met for display. A panel is measured from corner to corner diagonally to determine its size in inches, so that ppi will not be the same for every brand or model of TV with the same size. A TV labeled as 40" may actually be 38-43", which you can usually see if you look closer than the big signs that retailers use to catch your attention. Say you have two TVs labeled as 40", both are 720p, but one lists the true size as 40" and the other lists the true size at 43"; if you take the full designation for 720p (1280x720), you get a total of 921,600 pixels for the entire display of both TVs. When you divide that total number of pixels by the true size in inches, you get the ppi designation; for the 40" set you get 921,600/40=23,040 ppi, for the 43" set you get 921,600/43=42,432.558139534 ppi which rounds up to about 42,433 ppi. In essence, your 43" display will give you a slightly clearer picture.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.it is HDTV but not 1080. I think it is only 720 which still gives a great picture.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It does not
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This is not a 1080 HDTV. 1080 is the resolution.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
