This is a heavy duty TV and stand. It will need a truck to haul it. My 6 foot bed did just fine. It works great, with nice picture, it is just too big for our small living room, and we don’t watch much TV anymore. It comes with the stand, remote, and manual. The stand has spring-push glass doors, with plenty of space for DVD player, sound and or game systems and a few DVD’s. I hate to give it up but we really need the space. Below is more info on the TV and a few reference links if you are interested. Feel free to call, text or e-amil,
thanks
stand price:
http://www.etronics.com/p-54517-sony-su36hv1-sony-su36hv1-36-tv-stand-for-kv36fv300-and-kv36hs500-tv.aspx?OrderBy=3&pagenum=3&
TV price:
http://www.ebay.com/ctg/Sony-FD-Trinitron-WEGA-KV-36HS500-36-Television-/48207138
If you own a Sony Memory Stick® digital camera, you'll love the fact that the KV-36HS500 has a front-panel Memory Stick slot to let you easily view your digital photos on a big 36" screen — much closer to life-size than a computer monitor!
Details:
•Hi-Scan HDTV monitor (compatible with HDTV/SDTV formats — when connected to a separate HDTV tuner — and displays them at 1080i or 480p)
•4:3 screen aspect ratio
•auto/manual 16:9 Enhanced viewing mode for HDTV and anamorphic DVDs
•Digital Reality Creation Multifunction (upconverts NTSC sources to 960i or 480p)
•CineMotion™ 3-2 pulldown processing
•10-bit 3D digital comb filter
•SRS TruSurround™ 3D audio processing
•181-channel NTSC tuner
•2-tuner PIP (split-screen)
•flip/joystick multibrand remote with glow-in-the-dark keys
•video input labeling
•7 A/V inputs, including:
•4 composite video (3 rear, 1 front)
•3 S-video (2 rear, 1 front)
•2 rear-panel wide-bandwidth component video
(compatible with 1080i/720p/480p/480i signals)
•DVI HDTV input with HDCP copy protection
•2 RF inputs for antenna/cable
•Memory Stick playback (JPEG)
•30 watts total (7.5 x 2, plus 15 for subwoofer)
•40"W x 30"H x 25-3/8"D
Sony's Hi-Scan TVs are among the most flexible around when it comes to A/V connections. The KV-36HS500 offers a total of 7 A/V inputs, including two "wide-bandwidth" component video inputs. Use one of these inputs to hook up a separate HDTV tuner and treat your eyes to the breathtaking color, detail, and dimensionality of HDTV. This Sony is compatible with both 1080i and 720p HDTV signals (720p is converted to 1080i — a big advantage, as many TVs must downconvert 720p to lower 480p resolution). Use the other wide-bandwidth input to connect and enjoy maximum performance from a progressive-scan or standard DVD player. A DVI digital input is also included for greater compatibility with future HDTV tuners — especially tuners that receive satellite and/or cable HDTV signals.
While over 90% of U.S. households now have access to at least one digital TV signal, most of us will continue to watch regular analog material for a while, too. Sony's solution is to combine a standard 4:3 aspect ratio screen with their ingenious 16:9 Enhanced viewing mode. 16:9 Enhanced mode engages automatically when the TV senses a widescreen source — HDTV broadcasts and "anamorphic" DVDs are displayed in a 16:9 window. This approach preserves maximum picture detail on widescreen formats because all of the TV's scanning lines are concentrated in the 16:9 window and none are wasted on the non-usable portion of the screen (the black bars above and below the picture area).
Sony's Digital Reality Creation™ MultiFunction circuitry helps bridge the gap between conventional analog video and HDTV. This digital processing "upconverts" your analog video sources to 960i or 480p — images have up to four times the picture data of the original signal. When you watch DRC-enhanced video sources — especially DVD — you'll notice that horizontal scan lines simply seem to disappear!