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Planar PD8150
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Color from Glossy Black Whatever you do, don't touch the PD8150. This is not, as you're certainly expecting, because it will bite you. Once your installer mounts it and wipes it off, leave it alone. This is because the stylish, gloss black case attracts fingerprints like a Hummer attracts scornful glances. There's even a handy cloth in the case to clean it. But once it's up there (out of reach), the color that comes out of it is something to behold. There is something to be said about a company that creates a product with the mindset of “lets make this thing accurate." There are many tricks to fudge the numbers game that is the projector market, and none of them start with being accurate. Yet this is just what Planar set out to do with the PD8150. This isn't to say that you shouldn't have the display calibrated, different screens have different color shifts, but it does mean that it’s natively a lot closer to accurate than most other displays. Colors will appear natural (and they do), skin tones will be realistic (very), and the overall image just seems realistic. Less like you're watching a display. I watched it for a few days before calibrating it, and it looked great, but after calibration it looked a little better. Contrast Normally these types of auto-iris systems don't do anything to the actual contrast ratio within any given scene (as in the streetlights on a dark street). DynamicBlack, on the other hand, runs the bright areas of an image a little hotter, potentially increasing contrast in a scene as well. Personally, I found that this system tracked the signal a little too closely, causing some pulsing of the brightness. I tend to be over sensitive to auto-iris functions, so you may not notice it at all. Even so, with DynamicBlack switched off, I found the contrast to be on par with other DLP projectors, which is to say good, if not great. Light output was also good, though not as bright as some. Black level is decent, but not as good as the class leading LCOS projectors. Processing Overall detail was excellent, with the projector having no problems recreating a 1-pixel on/1-pixel off test pattern. The PD8150 brought out more noise from my cable feed than other projectors I've had in recently. The noise reduction circuitry did a good job smoothing much of this out, without over-softening the image. With content that had no inherent noise, the PD8150 didn't add any. Blu-ray movies and PS3 games like Gran Turismo 5 Prologue looked excellent. The color was the most notable part of the image. With accurate color points, close-ups of people looked that much more realistic. Shots of grass and trees looked natural and less like what we’ve sadly become used to these days. Enough so that at first glance, the PD8150 may seem less vibrant than its competition. On further watching, though, the relaxing aspect of true-to-life colors becomes addictive. Curviness All in all the PD8150 puts out an attractive, accurate image. When the competition seems to be pushing hard to out do each other with the most oversaturated and crazy "300% Color" claims, it's refreshing to find an entry into the field that takes a step back and just says, "shouldn't it look like this? Isn't this what the movie looked like?" Indeed. DESCRIPTION CONNECTIONS DIMENSIONS | |
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