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crtaudioprojectors




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Lamp life is commonly discussed in terms of " Half Life". This simply means crtaudioprojectors the manufacture has set a limit on what they feel is the quality life of the lamp. If the lamp half life is 2000 hours, the lamp will generally last much longer although the brightness of the image may deteriorate. For example, on an crtaudioprojectors and crtaudioprojectors LCD projector, the lamp half life is generally 2000 hours. The image brightness is normally above 85% of the original brightness up to 2000 hours. After 2000 hours you may see a drastic reduction in brightness. DLP projectors normally have less of a life and the brightness generally starts deteriorating before crtaudioprojectors the half life. DLP & LCD Digital Light Processing (DLP): The commercial name for this technology from Texas Instruments (TI): The technology inside is often referred to as either "micro-mirrors", or DMD: It works this way: build a few hundred thousand tiny mirrors, and line them up in 800 rows of 600 mirrors each. Now attach a hinge to each of those 480,000 mirrors. Attach each crtaudioprojectors of those 480,000 hinges to its own very tiny motor! Power each motor with electrostatic energy!

The motors tilt their mirrors up to 20 degrees at incredible speeds. This allows the mirrors to modulate light from a lamp, and send the "modulated signal" out through a lens, on to a screen. The most amazing part of DLP micro mirrors, is the scale of size. The 480,000 mirrors (actually 580,000 are used), hinges and motors are packed onto a "wafer" a bit larger than your thumbnail. LCD: LCD stands for liquid crystal display and comes in many forms, sizes, and resolutions. Its primary purpose is to present a digital image for viewing. A common use of LCDs is as a display on a notebook computer. Until recently, it was tough to find a decent 1,000-lumen projector that listed for less than $4,000. Now, you can pick up new 1,000-lumen LCD that the 6.6-pound projector builds on award-winning display crtaudioprojectors technology to provide improved video imaging in a lightweight, easy-to-use design. Introduced at three 0.7-inch LCD display panels produce a native SVGA (800 x 600) resolution and a reported contrast ratio of 400:1.

The projector''s case comes with plenty of room for cables and accessories. The full-function remote control is easy to use and includes a laser pointer. You can also use a bundled utility to configure and control the projector from your PC''s keyboard. You can also download presentations to acard and then play back the presentation without a computer. Setup is fairly easy, thanks to a manual zoom lens. The autosync feature set the image size and position correctly, but substantial tweaking was required to adjust the timing. The projector did a good job at both the light and dark ends of the gray scale. has packaged up a great product with the delivering all the key elements that the frequent presenter would want at a price in the low $2,000s. It delivers excellent contrast and sharpness, and it is the brightest of the machines in the review rated 1000 ANSI lumens. The remote is without a doubt the best compact, credit-card sized remote we''ve seen. Fan noise is low. The CS4 is the smallest and lightest of the SVGAs on our recommended list, weighing 5.3 lbs.



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