    Samsung TV
Lamp
Used for
projection units, the Samsung TV lamp is a one of the most
popular on the market. These lamps allow you to watch
movies, television shows, etc in the living color they are
filmed in and without a decent lamp; you will miss the
entire splendor. According to statistics the average TV lamp
may burn out after around 2000 to3000 hours of television
viewing. Samsung Corporation has researched these figures
and produced a lamp that will indeed last longer. The
Samsung BP-00224A OME RPTV lamp is guaranteed to outlast
many other models. The lamp has an Osram bulb which is a
state-of-the-art bulb designed and produced to last many
hours. Indeed Samsung engineers guarantee the bulb will work
perfectly for over 6000 hours. Samsung offers a six month
warranty for the product which is unusual as other
manufacturers only offer a 90 day warranty. The lamp is also
100% OEM compatible and is able to be used with most Samsung
hardware. Presently the price for this particular lamp is
only $100.00. Clearly a Samsung TV lamp is a good
investment.
Now
for those who are wondering what exactly a TV lamp is, it is
a lamp that is either used as a projection unit in front of
the TV or from behind. These lamps provide the color and
picture quality that you, the consumer, have come to expect
from a television.
Another TV lamp from the Samsung TV
lamp collection is the Samsung BP96-01472A DLP lamp. This
particular product has a 180 day warranty and uses a Philips
bulb and not the above Osram. Unlike other manufacturers
that sell the lamps as replacement parts, this Samsung model
is completely new, from the casing and housing to the bulb.
This lamp will give you months, if not years of service and
you’ll not regret the purchase. Priced at around $150.00
this lamp is a bargain. Other models in the Samsung TV lamp
selection all have similar features and it doesn’t matter
which lamp you buy from Samsung’s vast choice of models,
each one will perform to the standards set.
It is
important not to confuse a Samsung TV lamp with the TV lamps
of the 1950s and 60s which were nothing but a light source
mounted on top of the TV. These lamps were to prevent
viewers getting eye strain in a darkened room while watching
TV. In the early days of television, the best way to watch a
program was in a darkened room – movie theaters also were
completely black with only the screen providing intense
light. Nowadays, of course, movie theaters and home TVs
don’t need a TV lamp and movie theaters now leave pilot
lights glowing throughout the movie. This is the reason you
don’t squint any longer when you walk out of the
theater.
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