Black Bars. What's the deal?


I have a 55 inch Mitsubishi wide screen rear projection t.v. I own over 100 DVD movies and most of them are in 2.35 aspect ratio. When I play them I have top and bottom black bars on the screen. When I play the DVD's with 1.85 aspect ratio it fills the entire screen. In my t.v. owners manual it has a page warning you not to leave stationary or letterbox images on screen for an extended period of time and that uneven picture tube aging is not covered by my warranty. Example of these are letterbox top and bottom black bars, sidebar images, stock-market report bars, shopping channel logos & pricing displays, video game patterns and scoreboards, bright station logos and on-line internet web sites. I have been using my zoom function on my DVD player to fill the entire screen when using a 2.35 aspect ratio DVD. A fellow at my local audio video store told me that the black bars at the top and bottom can not burn a lasting image on my screen and when I use my zoom functiion to fill the screen it degrades the picture quality of the DVD. My question is: Will the black bars ruin my t.v or not? Any comments will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
jondon
If I am not mistaken the projection type units should not be affectied by this problem? It is the same idea as the screen saver on a computer CRT not letting an image burn itself onto the screen by keeping the image from being static for very long. The phosphores in the CRT itself are what I understood would be effected.Again if I am not mistaken,the projection type units work under a somewhat different principal. I think if you ran letter box images 24 hrs a day for along time it may do what they are warning against on a direct view(cathode ray tube) set. We need a TV "tube" guru to tune in!
Yes/burn in indeed.--From webtv.Took me a long time to notice. I now use what Poneer calls "Full Cinema"

This is vertical. The horizontal doesn't work the same way--Not this constant white/black.If one were to put a bright (top 1/2 of the picture) on pause--long enough;you'd get them there cosmic burn-in-blues--too.This will occur in a non calibrated set even faster.
My Tosh 56H80 does nothing but DVD and LD. No cable, no DSS and no OTA. The set was V.E calibrated upon first turn on with emphasis on corect white level and black level. With only about 300 hrs on the set I noticed very,very faint shadows of the black bars from 235:1 movies. These could only be seen during a totaly black scene(like a fade to black)on a 185:1 movie. I started using one of the set's "theater wide" settings, which fills the screen but crops the sides, for re- watching old favorites. First time viewings and/or critical watching are allways done OAR! Now after filling the screen more often, these shadows can only be seen with the room totaly dark and grainy or noisy 185:1 DVD(older movie like "Dogs of War")is in and an all black scene is displayed. I hope I can continue to reverse the process of the burn in as it looks like I am making progress.
Not that it really matters, but I thought it is the illuminated center part of the screen that wears with use. The black bars are not used and thus stay essentially as new.
I sell Mitsubishi Projection TVs. All the current (year 2000 to present) Mitz Hi-Definition series Projection TVs specify in their owners manuals that you do NOT, REPEAT NOT, leave the broadcast standard image (4x3 aspect ratio) picture on a Hi-Definition type TV (16x9 aspect ratio)for more than 25% of the time. You WILL incur phosphor burn-in along the line of the border if you do so.

I agree that the absence of light (or in this case energy), will not cause premature damage to the luminescence coating on the interior of the picture tubes. The problem is: That by consistently blacking out the sides (or top and bottom)of the image you will continuously saturate only a portion of the picture tubes phosphor coating. This partial area saturation will prevent a "consistent degree of burn-in" to the entirety of the screen; resulting in edge lines that will eventually become obvious to the eye. Once these "borders" are burned into the phosphors you will NEVER be able to erradicate them and you will be forced to live with them for as long as you own the TV. In my professional opinion, watch the stretched image most of your viewing time. I personally wouldn't want to gamble away 10 years off the lifespan of a $3000 TV for 15 months of inconvenience.

You will only have to live with this for a couple of years untill Hi-Def becomes the standard TV broadcast format. The manufacturers have told us they expect about 50% of all broadcasting will be done in Hi-Def by next spring. And the Big Guns in the industry, like Sony, Mitsu, Hitachi and Toshiba, will start mass marketing stand-alone Hi-Def Processors for Cable, Satelight and RF Broadcast starting this summer. And the competion for the market should drop the current $600-$800 processor price dramaticly over the next year and a half. This processor will greatly enhance your viewing options and you'll be able to see the knock-out picture that the HD sets were designed for. I watched the Winter Olympics in Hi-Definition last month and it was breathtaking.

So hang in there for a few months. You've got a great TV - don't screw it up.