Close

Member Login

Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

Not a member?

Sign up and join a community that's passionate about exploring the world of entertainment & technology.

Big-Screen Megabargains

Front projectors you can buy for less than $1,500!

Here's a message if you spend time squinting at a small TV: big screens are better for watching movies and most everything else. And I don't mean those puny 50-inch sets most folks consider "big screen." I'm talking about pictures that make you feel like you're actually in a movie theater - pictures 100 inches or larger! To get an image that huge, you need a front projector. (Click to read David Katzmaier's "Get the Big Picture.")

If you're thinking something that can deliver movie-theaterlike pictures at home has to cost an arm and a leg, you couldn't be more wrong. High-qual ity front projectors designed for home theater use start out at $1,000 to $1,500. In that price range, you won't get images as bright as you can from big-ticket projectors, and budget models usually have fewer features and connection options. Picture sharpness is also a factor: low-price projectors offer only enhanced-definition TV (EDTV) resolution rather than HDTV. But they can do a fantastic job with DVD movies, and high-def programs will look good, too, if not as sharp and detailed as they could be.

We put three affordable front projectors to the test: NEC's HT410 ($1,295), InFocus's ScreenPlay 4805 ($1,299), and HP's ep7100 ($1,400). Each one produces images using a single Texas Instruments Digital Light Processing (DLP) chip - a semiconductor covered with an array of microscopic pivoting mirrors. One-chip DLPs incorporate a translucent color wheel, divided into red, green, and blue segments, that spins at lightning-fast speed, filtering white light from the projector's lamp into colors that get reflected by the chip's mirrors to form an image.

While you can get a decent picture by projecting onto a wall, a good screen is a necessity if you want the best possible picture. For this test I used a 92-inch wide (105-inch diagonal) Da-Lite High Contrast Da-Mat screen, a $1,123 model designed for DLP and LCD projectors (less expensive screens are also available). I set up each projector 14 feet from the screen for my evaluation - far enough away to minimize the "screen-door effect," in which the pixel structure of the projector's display chip becomes visible. Now for the skinny on each of the three front projectors.

Post a Comment
(1500 Characters or less)
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use