Wasn't the DP2K-6E based on a design by Projectiondesign, a Norwegian company Barco acquired about 6 or 7 years ago?
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I got scammed - paid for equipment which never arrived... need replacements
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Sorry; following up on Steve's comment earlier that I forgot to in my last reply. The Christie secure compartment key is, IMHO, a much bigger problem than Barco's Dallas key. It's not the same model of key for all the production units of a given model - each projector has a unique key. So if the end user loses it and you need to take a card out of the cage, you are seriously buggered (as in, escorted to a cellar and introduced to The Gimp buggered). At least with a Barco Dallas key, if the end user loses it, you can program the serial number of the one you carry around with you into the CCB's flash memory, and you're good to go.
We don't do much with Christies, and I'm only called upon to service them, I would guess, two or three times a year. If a projector's key is inexorably lost, there is a procedure for ordering a replacement, but it takes a long time and is seriously expensive: that projector will be down for weeks rather than days. I've only done one installation of a new Christie projector in the four years I've been with MiT. On that occasion, I put the secure compartment key on the pedestal pin keyring, and advised the customer that if this key is lost, he is potentially in serious trouble (and explained why, minus the gratuitous references to sodomy).
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