Does HDTV works everywhere within the world??If i buy an HDTV contained by USA Florida would it work surrounded by Netherlands?? I want to buy an HDTV here in orlando
I want to buy an HDTV here in orlando florida but i want to know if it would work surrounded by nederlands, because as far as i know there is a diferent resolutioin within the TV'S
Answers:
They use 50hz HD signals and power in Europe... your US HDTV may or may not fiddle with it. Check the specifications. No. USA and Europe use different TV systems.
DON'T DO IT.
Outside of the power supply issues, most US TVs support individual NTSC. Europe uses PAL/Secam.
There are multi-standard TVs in the US that support adjectives standards, but these are usually professional monitors and cost far more than the commercial TVs.
FIrst, you will need to customize the AC power unless your set can plug into either 110V/60Hz or 220V/50Hz (even consequently you may need an adapter plug so it will plug into the wall). But, that may show up.
Also, don't worry something like digital TV resolutions, because unlike analog TV resolutions which are different by broadcast system (525 vertical lines for NTSC, 600 for PAL and SECAM), DTV resolutions (480, 720, and 1080) are the same world huge.
If you are hooking up component or HDMI cables to some sort of player or external tuner/decoder (such as cable TV), it should work! HDTVs should know how to accept 24, 50, and 60 Hz revitalize rates through either component or HDMI connections. The 3rd source below shows that you must use an HDMI nouns to get 1080p, but the other resolutions (including 1080i) should progress over either component or HDMI connections.
But, in that IS one exception to complete compatibility, and it's a big one: Over-the-air broadcast DTV/HDTV. If you are talking something like over-the-air broadcasts, then the digital broadcast systems ARE different, and the ATSC tuner surrounded by the USA model will NOT receive the European DVB broadcasts (and the NTSC analog tuner won't receive the PAL or SECAM analog broadcasts, either). But that's over-the-air broadcasts only!