In recent months, three major manufacturers have reportedly withdrawn from the rear-projection TV (RPTV) market.
Hitachi, which no longer supplies rear-projection TVs in Europe anyway, has made the same move in North America, focussing instead on LCD and plasma. In early December, another Japanese company, Epson, said it would follow suit and concentrate on its standalone front projector products.
Sony became the third to announce an impending withdrawal from rear-projection, after cutting its US sales target for RPTV for 2007-08 by 43 per cent.
RPTVs are just too damned big
The traditional UK or European living room barely has space for rear-projection TVs. Sets typically exceed 40 inches, and are usually 50 to 70 inches on the diagonal. But unlike plasma, they are closer in terms of picture quality to bulky cathode-ray tube TVs than svelte wall-mountable flatscreens.
LCD TVs have been increasing in size to rival plasma at around the 40-50inch scale. A general price crash in the flatscreen market means that these once pure luxury items are now more affordable to the masses and so close in cost that there’s barely a gap between them.
Daryl Street, general manager of UK sales at Hitachi says, “Plasma is still the most popular choice in large screen sizes for the more critical viewer. Prices are continuing to fall, but as features such as Full HD and ever larger screen sizes are becoming more popular we are able to add some more value to the average prices, but clearly the trend is downwards.”
Is it any wonder that rear-projection is suffering? At a time when almost everyone you know is probably switching from CRT to LCD or plasma, do you even know anyone who has a rear-projection TV? [Ed - we know one, but he's going to switch to a plasma...]
The slow death of rear-projection
Research by GfK reported that in the year to October 2007, 6.1m LCDs, 1.5m CRTs and 600,000 plasmas were sold in the UK, compared to just 20,000 rear-pro TVs.
In a way, this is a shame. Rear-projection TVs don’t suffer some of the drawbacks of LCD, such as limited viewing angles, slight image blur and lack of deep black levels; nor do they suffer screen burn like plasma, which is RPTV’s only realistic rival in 50inch-plus sizes.


Your comments (1) Click to add a new comment
ebg_51
March 20th
1. I believe in rptv. Laser will save it unless Laser can be incorporated into another format. An RPTV that is only 8-10" thick will still mount on a wall if need be.
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