Due to the impending demise of analog TV over-the-air signals in June (unless the bozos in Washington delay it again) I have been researching small LCD flat panel TVs with and without a DVD player. And I have been following the discussions on this site also looking for some specific recommendations.
Last weekend I was visiting friends in northern NJ and they had just bought a Coby 15" TV without a DVD player for their kitchen. The price seemed very good- only $138+tax, so I went shopping.
I really wanted a unit with a built-in DVD player and I wanted one that would accept 12V input power directly. This means that it would use a "wall wort" or an external power converter (120VAC to12VDC). Although the Coby TV without the DVD pl;ayer requires 120VAC direct input, the model with the DVD player uses a external converter to 12VDC.
Long story short- I bought the Coby TV with the DVD player. It is model TF-DVD1591 and it is a 4:3 format (not letterbox) and it will display all resolutions from 480i (current analog quality) to 1080i (HD quality) Display modes can be 4:3 or letterbox on the screen. It has mounting holes for the standard VESA 75 mount, and inputs for a PC monitor, A/V inputs, and more. Price was $187 +tax.
About power consumption- the LCD flat screen TVs are generally power-hungry. Not a good thing to be if you live on a sailboat. So I made some measurements, hoping that the results would not demand that I install a second diesel generator.
At standby, the unit draws 37mA. I can't imagine why anyone would let the set be powered on all the time, but that works out to about 0.89 AH/day. In TV playing mode, the current draw is 1.8A and with a DVD playing the draw is 1.9A. As my wife would say, This was a good buy. I just saved $9000 bucks on not needing a second generator!
I'm happy.:dance: This compares very favorably with my old 9" TV with a VHS player that pulled down 4-5A when in TV mode. So this new TV will use less than half the power of my old set.
Drawbacks- Isn't everything a comprise?:cry: The printed manual with the unit is poor. It doesn't really explain all of the controls and settings. Thankfully most of that is fairly intuitive. The only other negative is the remote control. Other than the buttons for the channel and volume and on/off, the remaining buttons are very small and the labels equally small.
See the pix below for visual details.
Last weekend I was visiting friends in northern NJ and they had just bought a Coby 15" TV without a DVD player for their kitchen. The price seemed very good- only $138+tax, so I went shopping.
I really wanted a unit with a built-in DVD player and I wanted one that would accept 12V input power directly. This means that it would use a "wall wort" or an external power converter (120VAC to12VDC). Although the Coby TV without the DVD pl;ayer requires 120VAC direct input, the model with the DVD player uses a external converter to 12VDC.
Long story short- I bought the Coby TV with the DVD player. It is model TF-DVD1591 and it is a 4:3 format (not letterbox) and it will display all resolutions from 480i (current analog quality) to 1080i (HD quality) Display modes can be 4:3 or letterbox on the screen. It has mounting holes for the standard VESA 75 mount, and inputs for a PC monitor, A/V inputs, and more. Price was $187 +tax.
About power consumption- the LCD flat screen TVs are generally power-hungry. Not a good thing to be if you live on a sailboat. So I made some measurements, hoping that the results would not demand that I install a second diesel generator.
At standby, the unit draws 37mA. I can't imagine why anyone would let the set be powered on all the time, but that works out to about 0.89 AH/day. In TV playing mode, the current draw is 1.8A and with a DVD playing the draw is 1.9A. As my wife would say, This was a good buy. I just saved $9000 bucks on not needing a second generator!
I'm happy.:dance: This compares very favorably with my old 9" TV with a VHS player that pulled down 4-5A when in TV mode. So this new TV will use less than half the power of my old set.
Drawbacks- Isn't everything a comprise?:cry: The printed manual with the unit is poor. It doesn't really explain all of the controls and settings. Thankfully most of that is fairly intuitive. The only other negative is the remote control. Other than the buttons for the channel and volume and on/off, the remaining buttons are very small and the labels equally small.
See the pix below for visual details.
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