Great projector. I replaced a high end Sony and the picture on the Optoma UHD65 is crisper and brighter. The fan is super quiet. My only pet peeve with this projector is the absence of Keystone adjustment. Why leave this off
Great projector. I replaced a high end Sony and the picture on the Optoma UHD65 is crisper and brighter. The fan is super quiet. My only pet peeve with this projector is the absence of Keystone adjustment. Why leave this off
Leading the charge of budget projectors with 4K and HDR capabilities is the Optoma UHD65.
Great reference colour reproduction; Vertical lens shift; Silent
Low brightness; Poor audio; No horizontal lens shift
It's hard to judge the Top Pick–worthiness of a product with a unique feature set. I've reviewed many projectors, butthis is the first HDR-capable model I've tested that lists for $2,500.
Superb resolution in HD and UHD; Effective HDR for a projector; Affordable price
Poor contrast and black level; HDR color banding
The Optoma UHD65 is the first single-chip 4K DLP projector unequivocally aimed at the home cinema enthusiast. Sporting an all-black chassis, with stylish metallic accent, it's designed to vanish in a dark cinema room. It's also compact enough to either ceiling mount or pop into a shelving system.
Highly cinematic 4K images; Relatively quiet; Rich; vibrant colour performance
Limited contrast; Limited motion resolution may disappoint sports fans; HDR performance not entirely convincing
The Optoma has a very classic projector design with the lens centrally mounted with a black rectangular plastic body.
Full 4K UHD HDR compatibility; Faux 4K performance is very good; Excellent sharpness thanks to single chip; Accurate colours to Rec.709; Full...
Poor black levels and shadow detail performance in bat cave conditions; No wide colour; Can look expensive compared to competition; No motorised lens...
Despite 4K resolution rapidly becoming a default feature of TVs despite a paucity of 4K broadcasts, the same is not true of projectors for the home.
Bright yet quiet; Highly detailed 4K; Clean upscaling; Built-in speaker; No rainbow effect
Only vertical lens shift; No motorised focus/zoom; Not as bright as expected; Basic user interface
2017 is the year that DLP front-projection fans got in on the 4K action. I recently reviewed the $8,999 BenQ HT8050 , the first DLP projector on the market to use Texas Instruments' 4K DLP chip.
There's no question that 4K is quickly becoming the standard resolution for entertainment and gaming. With more streaming content and gaming available in 4K UHD and 4K televisions coming down in price, more homes are adopting the technology.
Crisp; vibrant picture; Smooth playback for movies and gaming; Quiet fan operation; Reasonably priced; HDR support
Odd occasional source issue; Not widely available for purchase
I purchased this projector to replace my Sony vpl-hw30es that i've had for years. The first thing i noticed after taking it out of the box is how light it is. It feels like there's nothing inside. The next thing i noticed was how thin & cheap feeling the plastic is.
i wanted to buy a sony as i had an old 55es which what hifi rated 5 stars it was magnificent but i wanted a 4k one sony was to expensive so i decided to buy the optoma and i am very pleased wih it its got wonderful picture quality the 4k is great HDR is ok not briiiiant but passable the worst thing...
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