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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Optoma HD72 By Kevin Miller, Special to ZDNet May 22, 2006 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/coolgear/electronics/soa/Optoma-HD72/0,139023382,139257170,00.htm
Among the best value in front projection in its class, the Optoma HD72 is a surprisingly good performer at a price that represents reasonable value.
Design The Optoma HD72 has a small rectangular chassis (347 by 245 by 94 mm) that weighs next to nothing (3.1 kilograms). The lens assembly sits all the way on the right side of the chassis when floor-mounted or all the way to the left if flipped upside down for mounting on the ceiling. Optoma's remote is small, though we find it exceedingly well laid out. It's all white with black lettering and, thankfully, fully backlit at the touch of a button. We appreciate the direct-access keys for contrast, brightness, image shift and keystone, as well as for all inputs and aspect ratios. Features While the Optoma lacks lens shift, it's otherwise laden with picture-affecting features. However, as with most TVs that offer tons of adjustments, some of them are best left in their default positions. The highly touted Brilliant Colour, a new Texas Instruments technology for this year, does nothing to improve the colour gamut or range of red, green or blue, though it perceptibly brightens the image. TrueVivid, which the company claims sharpens the picture, does nothing of the kind. We left both of these features turned off for critical viewing. Horizontal and vertical keystone should also be avoided; as with all such circuits, they degrade the picture quality. Conveniently, in addition to independent input memories, all five of the Optoma HD72's picture modes are customisable. There are three selectable colour temperatures -- called 0, 1, and 2 -- all of which result in different greyscales. Also, there are four Degamma (read: gamma) settings, with Film being the best choice for video. Full controls for greyscale calibration are located in the Advanced menu. The Optoma's connectivity is fairly generous compared to that of many entry-level DLP projectors on the market. One HDMI and one DVI input give you two digital inputs, and you can use a HDMI-to-DVI adapter (not included) if you have two HDMI components. There is also one input each for component-, composite, and S-Video, as well as an odd four-pin mini-DIN connector that functions as RS-232 control port. A 12-volt trigger is on board for electric dropdown screen control. Performance The biggest weakness is poor gamma, which creates a slightly bumpy greyscale that can result in minor discoloration in grey areas and adversely affects overall colour reproduction. Poor gamma also causes the HD72 to lose shadow detail, obscuring dim areas a bit. However, these are fine points to be making about a sub-high-resolution front-projection system in this price range. Overall colour fidelity was accurate, with solid colour decoding that lacked the dreaded red push. Though a bit uneven, the Optoma's greyscale, which affects all aspects of colour reproduction, measured reasonably on target overall, both before and after calibration. The primary colours of red, green, and blue, while not perfect, were certainly not as far off as we are used to seeing with budget front projectors. The black-level performance on the HD72 was pretty good, thanks to the Dark Chip 2 DMD chip, with blacks and very dark areas appearing rich and deep. During the opening scenes of the Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back DVD, for example, the shots of outer space revealed relatively inky blacks without a hint of any other colour, indicating a relatively accurate greyscale just above black. For brighter material, we fired up the tried and true The Fifth Element DVD and watched chapters eight and nine, which showed off the HD72's well-saturated colours and natural-looking skin tones. Chapter three, where the professor is studying the hieroglyphics on the wall, was a great test of the projector's detail, and the HD72 handled it extremely well. Both the HDMI and component-video inputs delivered full 1,280x720 resolution from our Sencore VP403 HD signal generator. HD material from our Time Warner cable system was crisp, sharp and full of rich colours. Shadow detail in dark concert footage from HD television was commendable for a projector in this price range, although not as good as it could have been with accurate gamma. Optoma HD72
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