Originally posted by Leo Enticknap
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Barco SP4K Series 4 Projector Issues
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by James GardinerThose models [Barco DPxK-BLP and CLP] are not current/available.
Originally posted by James GardinerWhen I did an overview of the new S4 product range, it was impressive that they have gone to the trouble of making all consumables rated to life of the projector. (Fans, closed liquid cooling loop etc) so I think the phosphor wheel was too.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Leo Enticknap View Post...For projectors sold in the last couple of years, the only consistent issue I've noticed is that the red laser driver boards have a habit of burning out: I've had this happen on four projectors so far...
As to the laser-phosphor from Barco on the S2 projectors...they still have LLU available, which can also have an extra-extended warranty.
None of the SP4K projectors have laser-phosphor. The SP2K do have laser-phosphor...just Blue on the smallest and RBB on the medium ones.
As for board replacement...the only other board I've had to replace (aside from ICP-D while they were working the software issues out) has been the Light Source Board (LSB). I've done 1 or 2 of them.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Steve Guttag View PostThe SP2K do have laser-phosphor...just Blue on the smallest and RBB on the medium ones.
In other words, does adding a red laser gain a perceptible-by-eye advantage (regarding metamerism etc.) – or is it simply a matter of getting more foot-lamberts?
Comment
-
In a sense, you lose the metameric issue with laser-phosphor because the color is so imprecise. If you ever look at the response on a spectroradiometer of an LP versus an RGB you'd see what I mean. A key to color accuracy and overall spectrum is being able to precisely reproduce the color...you lose that with LP. With just a set of blue lasers, you get blue (which you are least sensitive to) and blue through a yellow phosphor wheel and then off to the prism for it to send the colors their respective ways.
I'm not saying that the LP images look bad but they tend to be less vibrant, to my eyes and greens tend to look mushy or off. I tend to see RGBs as shifted red so, in a sense, an all blue laser "fixes" that for me but it doesn't make red look more natural.
Again, if you want to see the color accuracy, shoot colors with a spectroradiometer and you'll see just how inaccurate the phosphor wheels are.
Comment
Comment