Thanks for all the ideas an suggestions everyone. I took the TV back to Best Buy and exchanged it for a Samsung 120 hz and wa lah!! No problems!!
YourHero101 said:Try hooking up the tv w/ component cables or something like that and just see what that does if it does the same thing i would try putting the recv on another tv w/ the same kind of connection you were using on your new tv and if it still does it then its the recv if it does not then its the tv somehow putting its self back in some sort of default mode
Good choice, exactly as I predicted!Thanks for all the ideas an suggestions everyone. I took the TV back to Best Buy and exchanged it for a Samsung 120 hz and wa lah!! No problems!!
Not necessarily true ... it could still be the receiver, and the Samsung may be more forgiving of the receiver's faults.Well, that answers the question. It was the TV.
he's just lucky that was an option for him. For some they may be upgrading to DishHD and the TV's been in the house for a year ... what company in their right mind would take back a tv under those conditions? Replacing the TV was just the fastest solution available ... not the proper one.Good choice, exactly as I predicted!
What is the proper solution in your opinion then? This was brand new TV, why not return it for a brand name instead of some Best Buy house brand.Replacing the TV was just the fastest solution available ... not the proper one.
well its not a matter of "not returning" its a matter of what was the real *cause*. The cause was a problem with HDMI ... the real solution, would have been for Dish, to research the TV, find how *it* or *dish's eqiupment* was failing, and issue a fix, or the flip side, if the problem was in fact the TV ... dish to contact the TV manufacturer, tell them they have a problem in their firmware, that TV manufacturer addresses it in a firmware fix.What is the proper solution in your opinion then? This was brand new TV, why not return it for a brand name instead of some Best Buy house brand.
I have plenty of complains about the Dish receivers, that is not one of them. If that was a receiver problem then there would be MILLIONS of complains rather than a handful.
Dish is the signal source in this case ... its their responsibility to properly attempt negotiation with any HDMI connected devices.Your example to me is apple and oranges. You are talking about playing a disc in a player that will not work in a variety of players. Clearly a specific disc issue, not an equipment issue.
I also feel you have it backwards. Unless you know that Dish has many or even several issues with a variety of TV's regarding this issue, why would Dish have to do much investigation? It's clearly a problem with that TV - either literally that exact TV has a malfunction, or that model in general is different is some way than most every other TV out there. If that was not true the forums here would be filled with people having problems with HDMI and Dish receivers. Other than the PPV issue, I am not aware of many of these types of complaints.
It's not always the fault of Dish. Clearly, the best action was taken by the OP, pick from almost any other TV out there and not have a problem, or keep this one, wait for Dish to do a year long investigation, to find out their receiver is fine, it is that TV......
Component cables will give you virtually the same picture quality, just not as convenient. You also will not be able to order HD PPV movies if you do this.