Saturday, November 8, 2008

Get "More" Freezer Space by Opting For a Frost Free Refrigerator

The accumulation of too much ice formation minimises the storage space available in a refrigerator besides lowering its cooling efficiency. Every refrigerator in the world needs regular defrosting in order to render smart and consistent refrigeration solutions to its users.

How do they work?

The frost-free refrigerators come with a built-in thermostat and heater apart from a timer, which activates itself after every two hours. The cooling coils of these refrigerators are located outside the storage area ensuring a high cooling efficiency. Some of the modern frost-free refrigeration products come with a sensor instead of a timer and are considered to be the best defrosting systems. The heater of this refrigerator melts any accumulated ice and the resultant water is then drained out before the the machine starts to cool again.

Advantages of frost free refrigerators:

These refrigerators offer several advantages such as easy maintenance, no manual frosting and high overall quality. Let us have a close look at some of the reasons behind the immense popularity of the frost free refrigeration devices. In the present day world, more and more prospective customers are willing to go for a more advanced product such as frost free refrigerators than looking for any other refrigeration devices.

One of the biggest factors to give a boost to their sales and popularity is the easy availability of finance schemes apart from changing lifestyle, global exposure and booming markets. In addition to that, factors such as high product awareness, affordable pricing and high disposable income have led to an unprecedented growth of these appliances in the last few years.

Now that we have learnt a few things about the meaning, functionality and advantages of these high quality yet cheap refrigerators, let us now move to some of the biggest names and acclaimed products in the present day markets. Electrolux, Samsung and Haier are some of the biggest market players when it comes to high-quality, innovative and cheap refrigerators. The Electrolux 245L Ozone Premium, Samsung RT23QVWS1, Haier HRF-241MRY and Electrolux 245L Ozone Luxury are some of the latest frost free refrigerators in the present day market.

Whether you are purchasing a new or second-hand frost-free refrigerator, do not forget to consider important factors such as overall quality, reliability, portability, price, brand name, warranty/guarantee, customer care and after-sales services before placing your hands on one.

The author is a specialist in retail writing. Her writing skills reflect the outcome of years of exposure to the retail industry. Working with retail giants as a consultant has enriched her knowledge base and her passion for writing got fire. She can be read regularly on RetailsDirect.com. For details please visit: Fly mobiles

Greet the day with widescreen, flat-panel excitement from Panasonic's 50-inch TH-50PX50U. The 1,366 x 768-pixel gas-plasma TV offers a 16:9 widescreen dimension to match the aspect ratio of your favorite feature films and an HDMI input for direct-digital connection with high-definition sources. Not that you necessarily need them--the set's built-in ATSC (DTV) tuner pulls HD signals (480p/720p/1080i) right from the airwaves, and its QAM tuner is fully compatible with unscrambled HDTV cable reception. A standard analog NTSC tuner receives standard-definition (SD) programming.

The set's authorized CableCARD port means the set will also receive digital cable television systems services directly from a compatible cable operator without requiring a bulky, external cable box. You'll enjoy plug-and-play convenience wherever you are.

A plasma screen renders vivid colors like you've never seen before (as in, up to 8.85 billion in this case), extremely wide viewing angles (wider, even, than those of most LCD screens), and easy placement due to a plasma monitor's slim profile--the TH-50PX50U is a mere 3.8 inches deep, one of the slimmest plasmas around--perfect for desk or wall mounting. Brightness tends to be extremely uniform across plasma screens, which are also impervious to the picture distortion and negative color balances that afflict CRT monitors when placed near lighting or sound systems. The TH-50PX50U's contrast ratio is rated at an extraordinarily lifelike 3,000:1.

The High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) offers uncompressed digital data transmission between compatible devices, as between the TH-50PX50U and a DTV satellite receiver. Other connections include dual HD component-video inputs, 2 each composite- and S-video inputs, and a set of composite-video-based AV outputs simplifies hookup with an external AV receiver and speaker system.

The TV's internal stereo speakers are powered by 8 watts per channel. Special surround processing creates spacious 3D effects from stereo speakers and a selectable audio leveler automatically adjusts the volume level on your TV to prevent wide variations in sound between different TV stations and types of programming.

Other features include V-Chip Program lockout, on/off sleep timers, a remote control, and closed-caption decoding.

What's in the Box
TV, remote control, remote batteries (2 AA), a pedestal base, an AC power cord, F-type coaxial antenna adapters, ferrite cores, 2 clampers, a warranty card, a customer card, and a service-center list.
Customer Review: Plasma - Awesome price and product
I am very pleased with this TV! Quick setup, great quality, and good price. I got it from curcuit city - on sale at store, reduced online price, 10% coupon, and pick up from delaware - no sales tax. Any tips on how to optimize viewing with comcast digital cable box? How do i connect to box using HDMI cable slot?
Customer Review: Near Perfect
Purchased from Crutchfield in Jan 06 and received b/4 Super Bowl. Set up was a snap, connectivity was easy. Word of warning: prior to getting any HDTV, do some research on cabling-more on that later. Non HD channels look better and 480i channels look really good and full HDTV channels are breath-taking. Watching football or baseball is like really being at the game. Every little feature can be seen, amazing. The TV has been rock solid-no issues. The TV is light for a 50" but its still heavy, and if your lifting it up on a pedestal or high stand, its a two man job-but well worth it. The remote is OK, not great The speakers are tinny sounding and don't have great stereo seperation but that to be expected. One weird thing, the speakers buzz when on a HD channel-bizarre. Doesn't matter though, the sound is going through 600 watts of Onkyo receiver nirvana. Be careful cleaning the plasma glass-it smudges easily and is hard to clean right. Cables: if your going to spend 4 large on a TV at least put some decent $$ into decent cables. Your going to need an HDMI cable. Don't overspend here-its a digital signal-not analog. So get something sturdy and less-pricy. I use Belkin Pure AV (great) Component cable (RED, BLUE, GREEN). All DVD players have this connetion and I the TV has 2 inputs for component (I blv). Get something sturdy, well-built and don't overpay for name **cough**Monster**cough** I like Belkin, Philips, and RCA brand S-Video (2 connections) Many VCR's, satellite boxes, and all DVD players have this. This is where you need to spend the money. This is an analog signal and cheap S-video cables can ghost and make a good signal look terrible. Philips makes a good, cheap cable. But the best are made by Better Cables and Beldin Composite (2 I blv) These are worthless to the people who care about video fidelity. If you HAVE to use composite, get a high end compoent cable and take one of the wires off and use it. Coaxial (1 input) this the signal coming in from the satellite, cable or antenna. For heaven's sake use R6 cable, for that short run. If this is how I got my HD signal (no VCR's or boxes) I'd max out and buy one from Beldin or Monster. I'd probably buy a much more expensive run from the wall connection to wherever its going. In a nutshell, the Panny is well worth the money. Its going to be reliable and the company will back it up. If you can afford the 60"-go for it.


Panasonic Plasma TV

No comments: