Popular Mechanics - USA (2021-03)

(Antfer) #1
80 March/April 2021

BEST CINEMA
EPSON HOME
CINEMA 4010

Price: $2,000 / Projection
engine: Three-chip LCD /
Light source: Bulb / Reso-
lution: 4K-capable, HDR10
/ ANSI lumens: 1,704 /
Speakers: N/A

While DLP projectors
deliver remarkable ver-
satility, LCD projectors
like this are still the best
option for dedicated the-
aters, due to their high
contrast and deep blacks.
The Epson 4010 (and sim-
ilar 4050, which comes
with installation accesso-
ries) produces a gorgeous
image rich in detail and

crackling with color. This
is an old-school projec-
tor, hulking and heavy, that
you’ll want to mount to a
ceiling. When you do, the
2.1x zoom makes find-
ing the right spot easier,
and the mechanical focus
helps you zero in a crisp

image quickly. There are
no smart features, and the
massive remote looks like
one of those giant univer-
sal controllers you used to
dig out from Papa’s couch.
Minor trade-offs, though,
for a cinema-quality expe-
rience at a good price.

Home
13
// BY LOUIS M A ZZ A NTE //

Your Next


Big-Screen


TV May Be


a Projector


BEST ULTRA-SHORT-THROW
SAMSUNG THE
PREMIERE LSP9T

Price: $6,500 / Style:
Ultra-short-throw / Pro-
jection engine: Single-chip
DLP / Light source: Three
lasers / Resolution: 4K-
capable, HDR10+ / ANSI
lumens: 2,891 / Speakers:
Four 10-watt, 4.2 channel

It didn’t take Samsung long
to muscle its way back into
the projector game. Its first
product in 10 years, called
The Premiere, is the best
premium model we tested.
It has excellent image qual-
ity, even in ambient light.
Its triple lasers—one each
for red, blue, and green—
produce crisp, detailed,
and rich images. It has sur-
prisingly good 40-watt
speakers and an intuitive

and smart operating sys-
tem that makes it easy
to stream or project an
image from your Samsung
phone. It’s also the bright-
est projector we tested.
With a supertight throw
ratio, it needs to sit only
4 inches from the wall to
project a 100-inch image.
And at a lower-resolution
setting, The Premiere has
a 60hz refresh rate, which
gamers will like.

T


H E MA S S I V E WI D E - SCREEN
images created by home
projectors have always
awed. Yet for all their cin-
ematic glory, the devices
were cumbersome and only
worked well in dark, subter-
ranean home theaters.
Te c h c h a n g e s r a p i d l y, h o w e v e r,
and advances in digital light pro-
jection (DLP) have led to smaller
projectors that shine more light than
older LCD models, even in well-lit
rooms. Many integrate with smart
streaming systems and sit right on
a media console or coffee table, pro-
ducing 4K images that rival the best
TVs (see Pixel Tricks sidebar).
They’re not perfect, but the
excitement is real. Look at Sam-
sung, the world’s largest TV maker.
After walking away from projectors
a decade ago, the brand returns with
The Premiere, an ultra-short-throw
projector that’s as thrilling as the
company’s most capable televisions.
We tested 10 projectors across a
range of uses—from premium ultra-
short-throw models to soda can–size
portable units. We measured their
brightness in ANSI lumens, a mea-
sure of luminance across the screen,
using each projector’s standard
viewing setting, then evaluated
their features and tested image
quality. We projected the image in a
lightless theater room on a 100-inch
screen, and again with about 10 lux
of ambient light. These are our five
favorites.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY TREVOR RAAB
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