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    Projector Advice for Your Humble Narrator (Mark)

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    • crystalhorizon
      crystalhorizon Beta Platinum @mark last edited by

      @mark said:

      Has anyone had experience with the less expensive brands like Optoma

       I had good experiences with Optoma. But they were not laser...

      Alexander Nantschev | http://www.crystalhorizon.at | located in Vienna Austria

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      • keftaparty
        keftaparty last edited by

        @mark 

        Do you have any lens requirements ?

        Looking at the picture of the space I would think very short throw machines could be practical, but I might be wrong, depending on the use.

        I would also suggest laser, these machines are usually much more quiet than lamp based as they need much less cooling.

        Best

        Mehdi

        ...
        Mehdi Toutain-Lopez
        www.toutain-lopez.com

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        • n.jones
          n.jones Beta Tester @mark last edited by

          @mark I could also recommend the epson range if on a budget . This is a 7000lumen version not laser ,but with admittedly with a super expensive short throw lens. 

          New Media Artist , among other things. https://www.i-d-e-a.co.uk
          MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2018),Mojave, 2.9 GHz Intel Core i9, 16 GB 2400 MHz DDR4, Radeon Pro 560X 4 GB
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          • laurentR
            laurentR last edited by laurentR

            Hello Mark, I have used recently the laser ViewSonic LS900WU, 6000 lumens, on a 6 meters large projection with some additional light on stage, and was quite happy with the brightness and quality of image. And the noise was very reasonable. This model is unfortunately out of your budget ( aroud 3000€ in France ) but Viewsonic has some others in the same product line, with less luminosity of course, like the LS750 around 1700€ and 5000 lumens, that may be interesting. Also the LS700, in the list you mentionned, but even less powerfull...

            MBP 15' 2019 & MBP 13' 2015 - OSX10.14 & MP 2.8Ghz QC Xeon + GTX660 - OSX10.12 / Isadora 2.6.1/3.2 - Located France

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            • DusX
              DusX Tech Staff @laurentR last edited by

              @laurentr said:

              ViewSonic

               I recently used 3x Viewsonic 3000 Lumen short throws for rear projection (not laser) that toured with the show and had no problems.

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              • Clement
                Clement last edited by

                Hello everyone,

                Laser projectors are new light source technology compared with lamp projectors, but I might be wrong, the LCD or DLP picture matrix doesn't depend of this.

                Does anyone know if the "rainbow" seen when you move your eyes on mono-DLP projectors is still present with laser technology ?

                Best wishes.

                Clement

                https://clementbardet.wordpress.com
                MBP retina late 2013 l 2,3GHz Core i7 l 16GB Ram l 2GB VRAM l OSX 10.12.6 l Latest Isadora version

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                • Kathmandale
                  Kathmandale last edited by Kathmandale

                  We used Epson lasers on Night of the Living Dead. They were hires, really solid no complaints at all although fitting the superwide mirrored lenses was more of a faff than it is with the Panasonics.


                  On this show the three big walls were covered with 2x EB-L1715 (15k-SXGA) and 1x EB-L1755 (15k-WUXGA) - This range of Epsons are 3x LCD and are probably a bit bigger, more expensive and probably also noisier than you want for this job Mark, but we were really happy with them. I'd have no major concerns with them as a brand. The two screens overhead were our own old work horse Panasonic PT-D5700s, who's days are sadly numbered.

                  That said, I did work on an outdoor event a couple of years ago using Epsons to project on a building and we could not get the colour calibration to match in the projectors, the tell tail was how different they looked projecting onto the inside of the rain shutters in their temporary enclosure; when both projecting black there was one yellow/grey square on the shutter and one blue/grey. It was fine for that gig and we could adjust things a bit on the servers but I'd maybe want some kind of demonstration if I was in the kind of situation where you need precise, careful colour grading as it sounds, perhaps, you do. Those were obviously hires, out doors in a wet November, so it could have been many factors, but it's the only time I've ever had a problem with them.

                  2014 MBP Mojave 10.14.6 OS with 16GB, 2.5Ghz i7 quad core, Intel Iris Pro 1536 & Geforce GT 750m 2GB - Izzy 3.0.8
                  Gigabyte Brix Windows 10 with 32GB, i7-6700 quad core, 4GB GeForce GTX 950 - Izzy 3.0.8
                  Based in Manchester, UK.

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                  • n.jones
                    n.jones Beta Tester @Kathmandale last edited by

                    @kathmandale this was the last live theatre I saw , amazing work . Hope to see more again in real life. 

                    New Media Artist , among other things. https://www.i-d-e-a.co.uk
                    MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2018),Mojave, 2.9 GHz Intel Core i9, 16 GB 2400 MHz DDR4, Radeon Pro 560X 4 GB
                    Intel UHD Graphics 630 1536 MB - Located Liverpool UK

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                    • bonemap
                      bonemap Izzy Guru last edited by

                      @mark said:

                      thoughts about what you see in that list

                       Hi Mark,

                      Just a comment on the ultrashort throw projectors. I have used an epson ultrashort throw previously and, like the Epson in your list, they specify a maximum diagonal image size of 120". However, we did create a much larger image by physically moving the projector further away from the projection surface. What it is doing then is potentially shifting what can be focussed and the longer throw distance for a larger image appears to then have softer edges and focus across the entire image is harder to attain. These short-throw projectors are fixed lens without zoom as, I recall, so they become quite limited in terms of flexible options for placement etc.

                      Besides those limitations the possibility of running the projector in tight spaces can be ideal. 

                      Projectors with interchangeable lenses are great, but outside your price range. In addition the ultra short throw lens for the interchangeable projector can easily be a cost greater than the projector itself. 

                      Best Wishes

                      Russell

                      http://bonemap.com | Australia
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                      • Kathmandale
                        Kathmandale @n.jones last edited by

                        @n-jones Thank you, that's great to hear. Not that it was the last thing you saw, that bit's obviously rubbish.

                        We'll be back out soon though, new show is brewing... come say 'Hi' when we are.

                        2014 MBP Mojave 10.14.6 OS with 16GB, 2.5Ghz i7 quad core, Intel Iris Pro 1536 & Geforce GT 750m 2GB - Izzy 3.0.8
                        Gigabyte Brix Windows 10 with 32GB, i7-6700 quad core, 4GB GeForce GTX 950 - Izzy 3.0.8
                        Based in Manchester, UK.

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                        • Kathmandale
                          Kathmandale @bonemap last edited by Kathmandale

                          @bonemap I'd agree with all Russell says here. The other thing to watch out for with the ultra-short-throws is that they often have quite a large 'pitch', so if you place the projector on the floor it will project an image 'up' on to the wall; it's hard (or impossible) to get an image to reach the bottom of the wall because the angle of the mirrored lens has to shoot back past the body of the projector itself. Obviously if you are rigging/mounting it over head this is reversed and the image shoots 'down' leaving a gap at the top. This is a pain if, for example, you want to fill a wall with an image from floor to ceiling. Because of the extreme optics, as soon as you angle the projector off the horizontal things get messy quickly with the huge amount of keystone needed. Just something to watch out for and it obviously varies massively between makes/models especially at the budget/mid range prices.

                          Even with the top end kit it's an issue: the massively popular Panasonic DLE030/DLE035 lenses for the single-chip projectors have a huge pitch, dims A1/A2 in this diagram. The top-of-the-range D75LE95s for the three-chip monsters are slightly better, but it's still an issue. This can sometimes be even more a problem with flying cradles etc that make the body of the projector bigger and get in the way of the beam. 


                          The Epsons mentioned above have a really clever lens, the EP-LX02 that looks like a periscope and bends back round under/over the body of the projector so you get a more traditional 'flat' projection without the pitch. It's probably the one department where the Epsons outperform the Panasonics in my opinion. They're very expensive though; looking forward to when that style of lens trickles down to the cheaper models, as it no doubt will at some point. There may well be some cheaper classroom 'whiteboard' style projectors that already do this.

                          On the wide but not crazy-wide side you can get projectors with a fitted lens that has a bit of a zoom for some flexibility. I just did a gallery install with a pair of BenQ W1210STs, they had a 0.69-0.83:1 zoom and did a lovely job, they're only 2k lumen but it was a very dark room.

                          2014 MBP Mojave 10.14.6 OS with 16GB, 2.5Ghz i7 quad core, Intel Iris Pro 1536 & Geforce GT 750m 2GB - Izzy 3.0.8
                          Gigabyte Brix Windows 10 with 32GB, i7-6700 quad core, 4GB GeForce GTX 950 - Izzy 3.0.8
                          Based in Manchester, UK.

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