• Professional TV Repairs

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    Welcome to Manchester TV Repairs. Our team can repair virtually all audio/visual products including the very latest plasmas, LCD and dvdr systems. We'll give you a fast and honest service and kep you fully informed of the price of any repair at every stage. Contact us today with no obligation to see if we can help..
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  • 10 Years Experience

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    Our engineers have years of experience in fixing all makes of audio and visual equipment. With constant ongoing training we can offer a fast and reliable service in your own home through our team of friendly engineers. We've fixed thousands of items in the past ten years, let us help you and get your unit back to its best
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  • We Can Repair:

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    Staff have experience of fixing all kinds of televisions and audio equipment. From the smallest mic to the largest plasma Tv, no job is to big or small. Just ask us for a quote and we'll see what we can do for you.
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Call our team today who will ask some simple questions to start the fault finding.  Then one of our trained engineers will come to your home and give you a no obilgation quote for the repair of your television. Our quotes and fully inclusive of parts, labour and VAT and the price you receieve is the price you pay.

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About Plasma Tv’s…

For the past 75 years, the vast majority of televisions have been built around the same technology: the cathode ray tube (CRT). In a CRT television, a gun fires a beam of electrons (negatively-charged particles) inside a large glass tube. The electrons excite phosphor atoms along the wide end of the tube (the screen), which causes the phosphor atoms to light up. The television image is produced by lighting up different areas of the phosphor coating with different colors at different intensities

Cathode ray tubes produce crisp, vibrant images, but they do have a serious drawback: They are bulky. In order to increase the screen width in a CRT set, you also have to increase the length of the tube (to give the scanning electron gun room to reach all parts of the screen). Consequently, any big-screen CRT television is going to weigh a ton and take up a sizable chunk of a room.

Recently, a new alternative has popped up on store shelves: the plasma flat panel display. These televisions have wide screens, comparable to the largest CRT sets, but they are only about 6 inches (15 cm) thick. Based on the information in a video signal, the television lights up thousands of tiny dots (called pixels) with a high-energy beam of electrons. In most systems, there are three pixel colors — red, green and blue — which are evenly distributed on the screen. By combining these colors in different proportions, the television can produce the entire color spectrum.

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