Optoma HD67N – Effective 3D Projector System for a Peasonable Price

Optoma HD67N

Optoma has slashed the price of 3D home cinema using the launch of the world’s initial 3D projection adaptor, the 3D-XL, and a variety of affordable, compatible home cinema projectors (we utilized the HD67N). You can now produce a big screen 3D cinema for a package cost of much less than £800. Extraordinary but accurate.

The HD67N is really a diminutive single chip DLP projector, created with the gamer or informal big-screen movie fan in thoughts. The £500 cost point reflects the fact that it’s a 720p model, instead of Complete Hd, but the specification and build are both above typical. There’s an integrated 2W speaker which does the job if you’re setting up to get a fast gaming session, but fidelity is on par with a portable radio.
2D image performance is good for the cash. We were impressed both from the quantity of detail retained throughout movement and the smoothness of its 120Hz picture. Colour efficiency is outstanding, but black levels are average. The limited resolution means that Blu-ray images shed just a little bite, but DVD materials is sharp, there is some rainbow colour fringing, a common criticism with single chip DLP models.

The 3D-XL is an unglamorous searching box which takes the feed out of your 3D supply (be it Blu-ray player, Sky+HD box or PS3) via HDMI after which routes it on towards the PJ. The projector doesn’t need a dedicated sync transmitter. Instead image sync information is sandwiched in between the left/right frames, bounced off the display after which picked up by a receiver that glistens on the bridge of the nose of the provided 3D spectacles. The system is called DLP Hyperlink.

3D from this budget duo is actually very good. There is a tangible sense of depth within the image. Crosstalk isn’t an problem, even classic problem sequences, such as the church steeple in Monsters Vs Aliens, are clear. Sadly, we found that the eyeglasses often lose sync; you only have to glance away from the picture to get a second or two. This trait would wreck a 3D gaming celebration. We also found the eyeglasses to be a terrible fit, falling in the faces of all who tried them.

Optoma HD67N (glass)

Overall, we liked each the HD67N as a spending budget projector proposition and the upgrade option supplied by the 3D-XL adapter. Nevertheless, the DLP Link program is too unstable to get a wholehearted suggestion and the supplied Optoma glasses are bad. The 3D-XL adaptor is also suitable with NVIDIA’s 3D glasses and sync emitter, which may well prove to become a much better partnership.

Optoma HD67N price: £500 + 3D-XL Link 3D Adaptor – £280,  Optoma HD67N release date: Out now

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