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Viewsonic Pro9000 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £1597
inc VAT

Hybrid laser technology removes the lamp and makes the Pro9000 a very appealing home cinema projector

Specifications

1,920×1,080 resolution, 1,600 ANSI lumens, 133x321x260mm, 4.3kg

http://www.projectorpoint.co.uk
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The projector itself is surprisingly small for a Full HD unit. We’ve seen 720p models that are bigger than this. The moulded black plastic finish looks reasonably attractive, particularly around the off-centre lens, with all the inputs located on the back and controls on the top. It’s height adjustable thanks to four screw-in feet and the lens has +/- 15 degrees of vertical adjustment, but there’s no horizontal shift mode, so you’ll have to rely on digital keystone if there’s no way to position it parallel to your screen.

Viewsonic Pro9000

Around the back there are two HDMI ports, one composite and one S-Video input, as well as an RGB port that can accept composite inputs through the bundled adaptor. As the HDMI ports are both version 1.3-compatible, you won’t be able to watch 3D content on the Pro9000. This may not be a major problem if your other A/V equipment isn’t 3D-ready, but there are many similarly priced projectors from other manufacturers that do support 3D, so it’s a shame it isn’t supported here. There’s also a 3.5mm audio output, which you’ll probably want to use if you aren’t already using an A/V amplifier. The weedy 2W stereo speakers are understandably poor.

Viewsonic Pro9000

As Viewsonic’s first hybrid projector designed for home cinema, the Pro9000 coped very well in many of our tests. It was easily bright enough for the average home setup, with vibrant colours and sharp images. The lack of 3D support is disappointing, although not a deal breaker, and both colour accuracy and black levels could have been better out of the box, but we were still impressed overall.

Our only concern is the price. At £1,599, it’s almost £400 more expensive than the wireless HDMI-equipped Epson EH-TW6000 projector, and nearly £600 more than the HDMI-less TW5900. You could argue that over the lifetime of the projector you’ll save that money on replacement lamps, but with 4K just over the horizon we think the Epson would be a better bet.

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Details

Price £1,597
Details www.viewsonic.com
Rating ****

Specifications

Projector technology laser/LED hybrid
Lamp brightness 1,600 ANSI lumens
Lamp life 20,000
Lamp life in economy mode 20,000
Contrast ratio 100,000:1 (dynamic)

Picture

Native resolution 1,920×1,080
Max compressed resolution 1,600×1,200
Aspect ratio 16:9
Other aspect ratios 16:10, 4:3, 5:4
Max diagonal at 7ft 118in
Throw ratio 1.5:1 to 1.8:1
Optical zoom 1.2x
Projection distance 1.5m to 5m
Mirror image yes
Invert image yes
Lens shift horizontal N/A
Lens shift vertical 15%
HD Ready yes
Special view modes Dark room, theatre, games, sports, User 1, User 2

Inputs/Outputs

VGA input yes
DVI input No
Composite input yes
S-video input yes
HDMI input yes
Component input via VGA
PAL support yes
SECAM support yes
NTSC support yes
Audio output 3.5mm
Others inputs/outputs RS232

Other

Noise (in normal use) 28dB(A)
Size 133x321x260mm
Weight 4.3kg
Internal speakers yes (2x 2W)
Extras remote, cables (power, HDMI, VGA-to-component, RS-232 adaptor), carying case
Remote special features keystone, source
Power consumption standby 1W
Power consumption on 178W

Lamp

Lamp cost (inc VAT) N/A
Lamp supplier N/A
Lamp cost per hour of use N/A
Lamp cost per hour of use (economy) N/A

Buying Information

Price £1,597
Supplier http://www.projectorpoint.co.uk
Details www.viewsonic.com

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