repeat wrote:David M. wrote:For the people recommending LCD projectors instead of DLP for black and white content, do remember one other thing: LCDs tend not to have good white field uniformity, meaning that a white screen will show different patches of red, green and blue splats. That's especially noticeable with... black and white films - but is probably less annoying than coloured motion streaks. You can't win!
Oh man... What once seemed an enticing prospect has now become a daunting ordeal of choosing the least of many evils!
I believe David M is referring to the same issue I mentioned on the previous page:
Jonathan S wrote: [LCD projectors...] can also suffer, even when new, from lack of colour uniformity across the image - particularly obvious, ironically, on b&w...
I've seen this issue on every LCD projector I've owned or auditioned, but it seems much less obvious these days. Until I bought the Epson, I owned five machines which were all the same model but the red and green patches (I've never seen blue, except with panel deterioration) varied in both prominence and location from one unit to another, though they were usually in the corners, so most obvious on b&w widescreen. It can often be ameliorated though not eradicated with colour controls.
However, on the Epson there's only the faintest difference in hue (to my eyes) between one side of the screen and the other. I probably wouldn't have noticed it if I hadn't been already alert to the problem (my partner couldn't see it even when I pointed it out). When I raised it before purchase I was told:
ProjectorPoint wrote:Unfortunately, at this price point, with LCD projectors, there is always an element of miss alignment of the LCD panels. If you want to eliminate this concern, you will need increase your budget to a minimum £1600 + VAT such as the Epson TW8100
However, I'm not sure this would help as it's also visible - to the same slight degree - on a new NEC LCD bought by our community cinema for over £3000. When the Epson TW-3200 first came out there were many complaints about red corners, but PP told me this has been much reduced on more recent units like mine.
I agree with the views that DLP (the only alternative at budget price, I believe) delivers a superior image overall, but for me it's completely ruled out by RBE, even on expensive DLPs. I see the rainbows popping up literally every few seconds and the result is not merely irritating but unwatchable. However, if you (and anyone else using the machine) don't suffer from RBE, I'd go with DLP which is also cheaper and offers a wider choice at "entry-level".
Finally - and this is a common experience - I found that once I'd used a projector, even with its flaws and the extra care needed, I could never go back to watching a TV, even for relatively casual viewing. The only TV I own is a tiny old CRT for monitoring off-air recordings.