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Polaroid FLM-3732
Product Rating     
Get the sharpest picture and the sleekest design with this beautiful, ultra-slim Polaroid 37” HD LCD TV. Featuring HDTV and a high definition ATSC tuner, you can enjoy amazingly clear progressive-scan video when connected to a HDTV cable signal or a compatible DVD player. Catch every moment with the dual-tuner Picture-in-Picture (PIP) feature, which allows you to view a TV channel and a DVD/VHS movie or two TV channels simultaneously. High contrast, high brightness ratings, a wide viewing angle, and compact design let you position your new LCD TV for perfect presentation anywhere in the room. Built-in speakers with simulated surround sound deliver ultra-crisp but booming stereo sound. You'll also enjoy the convenience of a detachable TV stand, sleep timer, closed captioning, and a full-function remote control.
Features of the Polaroid FLM-3732 include:
- 1080i/720p/480i/480p digital compatibility
- 181-channel cable-ready NTSC/high definition ATSC tuner
- Dual Tuner Picture-in-Picture (1 ATSC, 1 NTSC)
- 3:2 & 2:2 pull-down with motion compensation
- Progressive scan
- Built-in speakers (10 watts x 2)
- Stereo sound with simulated surround sound
- Pre-programmed tone controls (bass, treble, balance, EQ)
- Trilingual on-screen display (English, Spanish, French)
- Input and channel labeling
- Sleep timer
- HDMI input
- VGA (D-sub) input
- 2 component inputs (YPbPr/YCbCr)
- S-video input
- Composite video input
- 2 TV/CATV coaxial RF inputs (1 digital ATSC, 1 analog NTSC)
- 5 audio inputs
- Audio output (RCA)
- Coaxial digital audio output
Polaroid FLM-3732 Consumer Reviews
(1 review)
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Reviewed by Jason on 05-11-2006 I don't usually go for "off-brand" electronics and while I use a lot of Polaroid film in my job, I never considered them a "giant" in consumer electronics, especially televisions. I was all set to get a 32" Samsung that had an amazing picture, but my wife found the Polaroid hanging not far away and really like the fact that it was much larger (who says size doesn't matter). After comparing the picture on both sets, I really could see very little difference in quality, and I was happy to see that the larger screen was almost $200 less. My concern was that it's a Polaroid. The sales associate told us that they had been selling them for 6 months and hadn't had any problems. He could have just as easily told me different and I would have been all over the smaller, more expensive set. I gave the Polaroid a try and have been very happy so far. The HD picture is quite simply amazing. SD brodcasts (especially the local channels on DirecTV which are compressed to death) look not as impressive as the compression artifacts are more visible than they were on the old SD CRT. The TV is directly across from a SE facing window and there is no more annoying glare like there was on the CRT and like there would be on a plasma. Of course, when the room is flooded with sunlight in the morning/early afternoon the blacks are slightly muddy, but all the LCD's I've seen in similar conditions have looked as bad if not much worse. It is still quite a nice picture even under the worst viewing conditions. There are plenty of input options. The built-in speakers are about what you would expect, sound comes out of them, and you can hear what's going on. But if you're watching HDTV with the 5.1DD, you wouldn't use them anyway. I wish there were more customizable features for tweaking the picture a little more and being able to jump directly to the various inputs would be nice too. For the money, though, it's a tough set to beat. Rating:    
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