EternalEnigma21
03-08-2007, 08:32 PM
I had a cable guy swear up and down to me that my 360 was going to burn up my HDTV imputs on my TV...
I had one set of HD imputs damaged on my Current TV, which is an older HDTV projection style, but I'm about to get a new Plasma... which I was excited to try out on the 360, but now I'm a little worried...
anyone here had any bad experiences, or heard anything about the Xbox burning up AV imputs on a TV?
I couldn't find anything on google, but this guy was adamant about it, like he's seen it a million times, but he was kind of a goofy redneck, so I don't know if he was just lying or what...
BTW.... I think I'm getting the Vizio (http://www.vizio.com/products/detail.aspx?pid=5) 50"... They seem to be a great value for 1699! Anyone having any advice or opinions on that as well, would be appreciated....
Daseal
03-08-2007, 08:40 PM
You know Plasmas burn out sometimes as early as 2.5-3 years after purchasing?
EternalEnigma21
03-08-2007, 08:43 PM
You know Plasmas burn out sometimes as early as 2.5-3 years after purchasing?
These are supposed to have 60,000 hours of life before they go to half-brightness, which equates to avg of 3000 hours a year for 20 years...
I don't know if they warranty for that, but cnet says they're good to go...
FRPLG
03-08-2007, 11:51 PM
These are supposed to have 60,000 hours of life before they go to half-brightness, which equates to avg of 3000 hours a year for 20 years...
I don't know if they warranty for that, but cnet says they're good to go...
Here's the problem with that. They haven't been around long enough for that to have been empirically tested. That's a best guess from the engineers.
dblanch66
03-09-2007, 01:03 AM
I have a 42" Panasonic plasma with a 360 hook up and have had no problem at all for almost 2 years. Connections cannot be burned out from an operating system. I really don't know what your cable guy is talking about.
saden1
03-09-2007, 01:54 AM
I don't follow. How can you damage/burn up HDTV inputs?
That Guy
03-09-2007, 04:11 AM
the voltage is regulated on those inputs. if there was a screw up, there would have already been a recall. those are mass-manufactured ICs (the little black square things on the 360 motherboard) who's ONLY job is to do HDMI, so the chances of that are infinitesimally small.
724Skinsfan
03-09-2007, 07:35 AM
the voltage is regulated on those inputs. if there was a screw up, there would have already been a recall. those are mass-manufactured ICs (the little black square things on the 360 motherboard) who's ONLY job is to do HDMI, so the chances of that are infinitesimally small.
Very true, although I doubt there would be a recall, just a change at assembly line and production continues as if nothing happened. A recall would just invite lawsuits (you owe be a new tv!). I work for an electronics (audio) manufacturing company. When something goes wrong, which is very rare, we're quick to fix it but we don't issue recalls. Maybe if we knew something was potential harmful to a person, like electrical shock or whatever but that has never happened.
jbcjr14
03-09-2007, 08:32 AM
Wow, I know about 100 people who have the xbox and play on their HDTV's and not one of them has had this issue. I also checked google and the xbox.com forums and found nothing that even comes close to this. He is probably just some Playstation fanboy! LMFAO.
EternalEnigma21
03-09-2007, 09:49 AM
I couldnt find anything either, but this guy was just so adamant about it, that it kinda had me worried... and my wife is swearing that I can never hook my 360 up to our new tv, that the old one will be the dedicated xbox tv and all that garbage....