DCR, ironically enough, has nothing to do with the panel itself, but the backlight. Always look at the panel's native contrast ratio as a measure of how deep the black can go.
DCR~PMPO, and anyway it ceases to exist when you switch dynamic contrast off, which, after 10 minutes of experiencing it, you will. At least, in all my demos, I ended up doing.
cann't be truer than what u said.
I can't speak for the size you're looking for, but in the 32 inchers I was looking at, the best panel I saw was a Philips, believe it or not. I wasn't keen on evaluating, so don't remember the model numbers, but it lost very little of its PQ even at some impossible angles offscreen, and straight to the screen it was nice and bright, even if the skin tones were slightly washed out, or maybe
I was comparing it against some very oversaturated and bloom-filled TVs.
Very few ppl care about it, I actually found the Sonys n Sammys fairly
reddened may be they do it since the red seems easily attractive initially, and buyers tend to prefer that. However extend the audition to an hour or so at a stretch and u know why you have tears in your eyes.
Not sharp, but if you split a Tata Sky signal to one hundred TVs, I doubt it can get sharp - every TV was displaying a blurry signal.
Even large malls like Croma, or brand shops like Sony World do it. Dunno when they'll realize that they are not doing any good to the sales figures by this. Why skimp on signals booster or repeaters?