2500 Lumens DLP Projector
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Customer Review
DLP Projector
This projector is the best. I use it at least once each week for multiple hours. It can be used with full room lighting and open shades. I just love it!
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Product Description
NEC NP115 - DLP projector - 3D Ready - 2500 ANSI lumens - SVGA (800 x 600) - 4:3 - NP115 DLP PROJ SVGA W/CMS 2200LUMEN 800X600. Brilliant color DLP projector for business and education - with long life lamp and excellent performance ratio. Top to learn more
Good choice for average person
This projector is a good choice if you want a low cost multi media projector for tv, video games, and movies. Even in "Movie" mode [one of the dimmest modes] with the lamp on "Eco" setting, it produces a very bright picture with very good color saturation. With that setting I get a good picture even with a couple lamps on in the room. And unlike many projectors, the two brightest settings ("Presentation" and "High Bright") maintain good color, so they're actually useful (and EXTREMELY bright). Black level is decent, and so is shadow detail. For the money, I think you get a heck of a deal. Picture is as sharp as I've seen for standard def., pixelation is not bad at all and illumination looks even across the entire image. It has limited color adjustments (just color and hue, no individual gain/bias controls for the primary colors) but that's not a big deal because colors are pretty good and become very vibrant as you turn up the "Color" control (it does have Gamma and Brilliant...
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No HDMI input.
I was under the impression that projector had an HDMI input. It does not. So I wasted money on the HDMI cords, but for a low range projector it's good. It feels like the technology is a few years old, but so far it's been bright enough for what I've been using it on. Not being an HDMI input accepting machine and not accepting DVI, the picture is only pretty clear (a good bit below 720p). With the text size turned all the way up on my computer and the projector creating about a 52inch screen, the letters are a little hard to read and the lines are fuzzy. Still, for $350, not a bad choice if you need a projector. If you want a home theater system, spend about $800, wait for the 1080p prices to come down when the 3D technology catches up with the market, or buy a TV.
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