| Optoma HD806 DLP Projector |
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| Home Theater Front Projectors DLP Projectors | ||||||||||||
| Written by Mike Flacy | ||||||||||||
| Monday, 20 July 2009 | ||||||||||||
Page 2 of 2 Testing: For Blu-ray testing, I used The Dark Knight, Kung Fu Panda and Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. I found the black levels on The Dark Night to be somewhat lacking for my taste. Perhaps I’m spoiled by recent LCD projectors, but the contrast in the chase scene that was filmed specifically for IMAX theaters was overexposed. The drab, interior shots of Prince Caspian exhibited the same issues. That being said, ambient light doesn’t effect the contrast levels as strongly as LCD projectors. Kung Fu Panda was brilliant, with or without ambient light. The high brightness levels offered up a vivid level of detail, but did produce the occasional rainbow artifact. The Xbox 360’s HD menu benefited from the high level of brightness and excellent color production. Streaming video from Netflix offered an above average picture quality as well as some darker video games such as EA’s Dead Space. The Downsides: One setting that I found to be fairly useless during testing was the automatic iris adjustment. Auto Iris adjusts the contrast range on the fly based on a particular scene’s lighting conditions. In most projectors, auto irises are adjusted several times per second. In the HD806, the auto iris function only adjusted itself every 20 to 30 seconds. The projector has a limited number of placement options due to the 1:2:1 zoom lens. As there’s also no lens shift, finding a good position on a shelf in the rear of the room can be extremely problematic. Mounting on the ceiling is likely the best option to avoid shooting the fan’s heat if it was sitting on a coffee table. That being said, there’s no motorized zoom of focus function and all adjustments require a manual change.
3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved." |
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