Jump to content

wuzzzer

Heritage Members
  • Posts

    11040
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Posts posted by wuzzzer

  1. An RC-62 will handle the weight of your Sharp LCD just fine. I know of many people who have their center speaker sitting on top of their TV stand and then their TV on top of the speaker. Lots of benefits of doing that, including having the center speaker closer to the same height as the front main speakers, and also allowing you more center speakers to choose from.

  2. Welcome to the forum!

    The RT-10d would be very nice with your speakers. Subwoofers and receivers have level output controls to allow you to blend your subwoofer to your other speakers so one doesn't drown out the other. Your RF and RC speakers are very dynamic and will handle very high volume levels - you want a subwoofer that can keep up with them.

    • Start your auctions low. It might cause some anxiety, but since eBay is such a widely-shopped marketplace things will sell for what they're worth. Only exception is if you have something you're not willing to ship due to size/weight/etc. Then its a matter of who's close by that wants it.
    • Make sure you specify where you'll ship. If you only want to ship to United States addresses, make that clearly stated. Even then you'll still get the ding-ding who wants to know how much it would cost to ship something to Zimbabwe. I personally ship only to United States addresses.
    • Schedule your auctions to end in the evening. You can specify the start time (and thus the end time) of an auction. 8:00pm PDT is what I usually start at. If you have mutiple items you're listing, stagger them out slightly so that you might get someone to buy more than one item for you. I've read that Tuesday night is the most shopped eBay night.
    • Pay for the listing to be shown in Bold only if you have something very unique or if you expect it to sell for quite a bit of money. The fee for a listing showing up in bold is up to $2 now and that can eat into the amount you get pretty quickly if its a lower priced item.
    • Encourage bidders to check out your other auctions but don't mention specifically what they are since eBay frowns on that.
    • If you've been on eBay for a long time (even if only as a buyer) and/or you have 100% positive feedback, draw attention to that in your listing. I usually put something like "I have been on eBay since 1998 and highly value my 100% positive feedback. Please email me with any questions you might have!"
  3. Well, no issues at turn-on or setup. Whew! The picture is unbelievable! Its only 9" larger than our old TV and I thought there wouldn't be a very noticeable size difference but its very obvious that its a larger set.

    I can't wait to get some animated movies on Blu-Ray from NetFlix to see what this thing can do. Watched a few minutes of Transformers on Blu-Ray and was very impressed. Unfortunately there are dozens and dozens of settings to tweak and adjust so it may take a while to get everything dialed in. I have an Avia setup disc that I'll use in a few days. I've read that its recommended to have at least 100 hours on the bulb before doing any serious picture adjustments.

  4. Wuzzer -

    I'm assuming on that TV that it's not being delivered via UPS or Fedex correct? I saw on Vaans that it's curbside delivery only. Does this mean you don't get a chance to inspect it first? I'd look into that.
    Regards!

    FedEx Freight is who they use. And, its coming tomorrow! Awesome thing is its my day off tomorrow!!

    Here's what Vanns says about inspection:

    "The Shipping Company may contact you, as you must be present to sign
    for your television when it arrives. At that time, please check the
    box and the TV carefully for any obvious sign of damage. If the
    television is damaged, refuse the shipment and call Vanns.com at 1-800-769-5668. Also, please write on the delivery receipt the reason for refusal.

    If
    only the box appears to be damaged please remember that we guarantee
    the condition of the item not the box. If you accept delivery,
    please note any damage on the delivery receipt. If
    you refused the shipment and there is nothing wrong with the television
    you will be charged the return shipping charges. If you accept the
    delivery, open your box and allow the television to warm up to room
    temperature before you plug it into a power source. (usually 4
    hours). After you have plugged the TV in, make sure everything is in
    good working order. Any claims for concealed damage (not seen
    before accepting delivery) must be made with Vann?s within 48 hours of
    receipt."

    Thing that sucks is its supposed to rain all day tomorrow - so that means I'm supposed to open up the box outside in the rain and check for anything wrong. Some on AVSForum suggested I take pictures of the box and the TV while the FedEx driver is there. I can't see the driver being too fond of waiting around for that.

    I just hope there aren't any issues with delivery, etc. My best friend had a Sony 52" delievered to him through either UPS or FedEX directly from Sony and he didn't have any issues. Hopefully all goes well with mine too.

  5. I remember being totally blown away by the first DLP I ever saw - it was about a 42" Samsung at Best Buy a few years back. They had an HD basketball game they were showing. Looked almost 3d.

    I ordered the entry level WD65C9 through vanns.com a couple days ago. Should be here early next week.

  6. i tried it out last nite, put on a action movie.. I adjusted the volume level on ps3 (mine actually goes from -4 to +4) i tried adjusting it to +1 then +2 and could not hear any difference at all except my ears seemed to be ringing.. so i tried -4 to +4 and no difference is sound.. so left it at 0..

    That's weird. Although, I guess it might only control the volume through the HDMI cable and not the digital output?

  7. Great buy Wuzzzer. Bigger, newer, 120hz and I am sure less than you paid for your JVC. I got my 57" Mitsu. 2.5 years ago and paid $1609.00 plus warranty and I thought I got a good deal. When it is delivered, pull it out of the box and take a few pictures before you sign and let the UPS/Fed Ex guy leave. Vann's has great customer service so you won't have any problems. $800.00 for a 2 year old RPTV, great sell for you. Enjoy.

    I found the original receipt for the JVC - paid $1749.99 plus tax. Best Buy threw in the matching stand for free which was supposed to be worth over $200. I'm keeping the stand to put the Mitsubishi on.

    Someone on the AVSForum said I should ask between $600-800 for the JVC. I guess I did well getting $800 for it then.

  8. Finally! Man, I thought I knew exactly what I wanted but after doing a lot of research I am buying a 65" Mitsubishi DLP from Vanns.com. 90% of the people on AVSForum said that getting an extended warranty is a good idea for TVs of this type so I picked up a 3 year extension. Total price $1474.96 ($1299.99 for the TV, $174.99 for the warranty).

    http://www.vanns.com/shop/servlet/item/details/458041989/mitsubishi-wd65c9

    Can't wait!!

    I'll be delivering my JVC to a co-worker tonight and helping them install it. Sold it for $800. He's happy because he was planning on spending up to $2500 for a new TV.

  9. Its a known fact that the PS3's audio output for DVD/Blu-Ray is quieter than most players. If you go to AVSForum and read the 'Official Ps3 as Blu-Ray player' thread you'll see that the recommendation is to set the audio output levels to +1 or +2 - default is Normal.

    Its also a known fact that your mind perceives louder as better. If you up the output levels of your PS3 I'm sure it'll sound 'better.'

    To set the volume output hit the green triangle on the PS3 controller, then select the icon that looks like a speaker cone. Hit X and it'll bring up the volume adjustment. Don't set it too high - it allows for +5 and -5. I would set it to +2 at the maximum. (You have to do this when watching a DVD/Blu-Ray disc).

×
×
  • Create New...