70"-80" TV vs Laser projector 4k for conference room idea.
-
Rear projection?
-
TVs have better contrast and brightness than most people buy for projectors.
If you are looking for the same quality out of a projector with the lights on you'll want something in the 5,000-10,000 lumens range if it's a decent sized room. And high contrast ratio.
TVs and laser pointers just don't work together.
-
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Rear projection?
Front, of course. Who uses rear projection?
LOL - nevermind - apple and oranges dude.. apples and oranges...
-
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Rear projection?
Front, of course. Who uses rear projection?
LOL - nevermind - apple and oranges dude.. apples and oranges...
I know. No one uses rear project for good stuff. That's horrible. That's like what my aunt had in 1982 with her shag carpet.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Rear projection?
Front, of course. Who uses rear projection?
LOL - nevermind - apple and oranges dude.. apples and oranges...
I know. No one uses rear project for good stuff. That's horrible. That's like what my aunt had in 1982 with her shag carpet.
Rear projection is great with in the entertainment industry. It wastes a lot of space to do it properly though. You have to have a pretty large dark room to do it properly (a waste of space to most). But you get much less contrast loss than front projection.
-
Yeah, you can set any of mine up as rear but what a huge amount of space that would use and you need really good screens for it. But you can't walk in front of it, which is nice.
-
My apples to oranges comment was about you saying you have a larger TV in your home than those conference rooms have. While the OP was talking about 70-80" TVs.
Sure conference rooms have had larger project TVs, but I was calling your comparison of having a 84" TV at home apples v oranges when you don't a TV, you have a projector. It's not the same. The end result might be close to the same, but the discussion is not the same.
But now I'm just arguing with myself.. soooooo.........
-
@Jason
I am thinking of something like smart remote with built in pointer if we go TV route. This does not mean we are settling for Samsung Smart TV.
Since we are not planning on purchasing a projector/TV every year I like it to last at least 4-5 years at 10 hr/usage per week
-
@Dashrender said:
Sure conference rooms have had larger project TVs, but I was calling your comparison of having a 84" TV at home apples v oranges when you don't a TV, you have a projector. It's not the same.
It's very much the same. I have a 84" display in my living room. That it projects from the front or the back might feel different to you but both are equally TVs. One is not more or less a TV than the other. That's a weird social thing that has arisen, but people in the AV space don't differentiate. Display devices are display devices.
-
@brianlittlejohn said:
@LAH3385 I have a Panasonic PT-RZ370U. I really like it, it is not 4k, just 1080P. I really like that there is no lamp and no filters. It is maintenance free, so one less thing I have to worry about.
What is the keyword to look for projector that is lamp-less and filter-less? What are they called?
-
@LAH3385 Panasonic calls theirs SolidShine. Don't know about other brands.
-
@scottalanmiller I know lots of churches that use rear projection. But you can always get a better picture with front projection, way more screen material options.
-
@LAH3385 said:
Since we are not planning on purchasing a projector/TV every year I like it to last at least 4-5 years at 10 hr/usage per week
Even at that for the warranty to be valid at all you'll need to buy a commercial tv for the warranty to be vaild in a business setting.
-
@brianlittlejohn said:
@scottalanmiller I know lots of churches that use rear projection. But you can always get a better picture with front projection, way more screen material options.
Just to save from having projects on the main ceiling?
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@brianlittlejohn said:
@scottalanmiller I know lots of churches that use rear projection. But you can always get a better picture with front projection, way more screen material options.
Just to save from having projects on the main ceiling?
Rear projection is the standard way of doing it in the concert/entertainment industry. You can control the lighting behind better to give you more contrast when you use short throw projectors. Front is more likely to get washed out.
-
@scottalanmiller Light control is the main reason, sometimes space saving by being able to bounce it off a mirror.