Thank you both for your time and replies. Being a graphic artist I think PDFs are great but I do understand and take your point about newbies maybe not understanding them as well. The reason I went with that format in the beginning was because the artwork was in Illustrator and it was an easy progression to save it as a PDF. Also, once I had done that and put it into my evaluation shopsite website I noticed that I could right click on them and they downloaded as PDFs onto my desktop. They could then be opened and printed easily and emailed to friends as attachments etc. Each PDF represented 1 product item and did contain certain specs and pricing. I liked the idea of having them as little individual product PDFs for each product. However, much to my surprise they did not display as a graphic on PCs.
Concerning the conversion from PDF to JPEG. I had no problem with distortion. I just didnt like the way the background color transitioned into the lighter type color in the JPEG. It had a harsh halo around the letters and what not. The same file, same resolution (72 DPI), looked much sharper and better when saved as a PNG. I realize JPEGs have many settings for saving them and perhaps I need to learn more about them. I have generally worked with high resolution TIFF and EPS files when handling high quality graphics for printing. The PC I viewed the PNG files on was not a very new one. I am inclined to believe that most browsers will display PNGs. I am also inclined to believe that if a users computer will not display a PNG file than they are probably not going to be able to afford my product anyway.
Thanks again for your comments. I will probably choose to live dangerously and use the PNGs until disaster strikes. At which point I can still always convert them to JPEGs.
Randy