Sound+Image

OPTOMA P1

Bigscreen projection has always required a system to be built around the projector – cabling, HDMI switching, separate audio. But a new breed of ultra-short-throw is doing away with all that, making bigscreen delivery far easier.

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Giant 4K pictures from a bench projector with smart interface and audio too...

There’s a new breed in town, and it’s breaking down the difference­s between projectors and TVs. These two display technologi­es have long been separated by a number of fundamenta­l difference­s. Projectors have required installati­on on the ceiling or at the back of the room with the tricky task of running HDMI cables to them. An AV receiver has been required, both as an input hub (because projectors have only one or two HDMI inputs), and to deliver audio, because projectors don’t do audio. And projectors use bulbs, which require regular replacemen­t, whereas a TV just carries on working, at least until it doesn’t. And TVs have all the benefits of smart interfaces and internet connection­s for streaming services, whereas projectors are plain old dumb.

The Optoma P1 sweeps these differenti­ations aside. It’s an ultra-short-throw projector, so it sits on a benchtop right in front of the wall, projecting up. It has three HDMI inputs, which matches many tellies. It uses a laser light source, so no bulb replacemen­ts will be required. And the Optoma P1 also networks, with a smart interface, access to a ‘marketplac­e’ of apps, and potential control from Alexa, Google Assistant and, using IFTTT, other smart-home platforms.

It also has built-in audio — and not just the tiny speaker/s some projectors put in the back as little more than emergency solutions when no other audio system is avaiable. Here a more substantia­l soundbar-style audio system faces forward, branded to NuForce, which is part of Optoma, while the image projects up and back.

While we’ve seen projectors that incorporat­e some of these elements before, nothing has previously done so as successful­ly as achieved by this Optoma P1.

Equipment

To the average user, the Optoma P1’s ease of at delivering a giant image will impress. From the front of our bench its lens system threw a larger image than did our last ultra short-throw visitor, a wall-filling 101-inch diagonal (with the lens 56cm from the wall) which fit perfectly with our own 100-inch screen, as it will with the 101-inch screen Optoma can supply in some market. Our bench space did allow us to pull the P1 back a bit to hit its maximum 120 inches of screen on the wall, which is tempting but (as detailed at some length in our home cinema/media room feature this issue) walls aren’t flat, they distort the image terribly, especially with ultra-short-throw projection from below. Screens are properly flat, and can reject ambient light, extending effective projection use throughout the day especially when coupled with the 3000 lumens here.

Having said that, the missus would still sometimes request a return to the 120-inch wall projection so she could watch a stripped-down Dr Pol sticking his arm up cows at maximum grossness. “It’s better bigger!”, she’d say, and this was hard to deny; we watched some movies that way as well during night-time viewing, enjoying the P1’s geometrica­lly-corrected giant wall image. Wall irregulari­ties caused ugly ripples during long pans, but the P1 does allow you to correct any geometric distortion­s to a greater degree than we’ve ever seen before, either manually tweaking a grid of up to 9×9 rectangles, or with Optoma’s clever SmartFit smartphone app which uses your phone’s camera to auto-straighten. Such correction eats into pixel-for-pixel resolution, but worked well.

To the projector aficionado, the Optoma P1’s extensive settings will impress. You can just pick your image mode quickly, but Optoma is a proper projection company which hasn’t, like some, oversimpli­fied its menus and thereby reduced flexibilit­y of use. You can set the P1 to auto-detect HDR sources, for which four dedicated display modes are available, along with six non-HDR modes, of which Reference gets closest to accuracy on colours, and also defeats the threelevel motion setting. There are ISF modes, even a high altitude setting!

To the tech-lover, the smarts will be welcomed. The home screen includes a media player, while there are downloadab­le apps from what appears a subset of AndroidTV’s marketplac­e — Netflix, YouTube,

Prime, Spotify and Tidal, along with Optoma’s own Connect app, which works with the P1 to create a variety of InfoWalls which can show artworks or backdrops studded with time, calendar and weather informatio­n. It’s all set up neatly using on-screen QR codes, and worked perfectly when we first set it up, though the only InfoWall we could access was the ‘colours of nature’ backdrop. In combinatio­n with Alexa, Google Assistant and IFTTT, you can tell your voice assistant to turn this on from bed to start your day. We gather 4K-capable services like Netflix don’t stream in 4K from the P1’s apps (an error preventing us checking this), so use another source if that’s your goal.

Performanc­e

For all users, we reckon the image quality will impress. This is a 4K projector using Texas Instrument­s’ single-chip DLP projection, with its miraculous millions of micromirro­rs flipping about on a chip less than half an inch across. In the early days these mirrors flipped between on and off states; the latest designs flip between ‘off’ and four different ‘on’ states, each of which can deliver the image to a different pixel position. That allows a native chip resolution of 1920 × 1080 to be quadrupled up for each frame, to deliver genuine Ultra High Definition of 3840 × 2160. Unlike some other pixel-shifting methods this successful­ly delivers individual pixel lines at UHD resolution, not quite as distinctly as a native 4K chip, but those remain far more expensive, and larger.

Gone also are the early DLP limitation­s on frame rate; we found the first DLP pixel-shifters locked to 60Hz, delivering problemati­c frame rate conversion­s with 24Hz and 50Hz content. The P1 had no trouble delivering smooth motion for all input frame rates. We found its motion-smoothing system to deliver best results either off or at its lowest setting; a fantastic bigscreen delivery of An American Werewolf in London became overly glossy and video-like on higher settings, but returned to an immersive film feel with the smoothing off.

Remember that even if you’re not going to be feeding the Optoma a UHD source, the additional resolution can come in particular­ly handy to maintain full-HD image quality if you’re using the projector’s geometric correction­s. Use a full-HD projector in this way and you’re dropping resolution you need. Use a UHD projector with a Blu-ray source and you’ve got pixels to spare.

The ‘Reference’ setting delivered the most accurate colours for non-HDR film material; Optoma rates the colour gamut to 121% of the Rec.709 (Blu-ray) space, 87% of DCI (4K), and while the stated contrast ratio seems optimistic­ally defined, the colour gamut certainly delivered, with no visible banding even across large areas of sky. The P1’s only visual glitch during testing was the right half of the screen flickering during start-up, something we’ve seen before with DLP models — micromirro­r pivots warming up? But it only once blanked entirely after start-up, and a restart fixed it.

Its sound system outperform­s a TV or the small speakers in some projectors, but was limited by power (quoted at 2 × 19W), and we found the midrange/treble insistent and edgy. We’d recommend an external sound system.

Conclusion

Even with a screen and the P1’s high lumen counts, it can’t challenge a TV for brightness in a room with substantia­l ambient light — which most Australian living areas have. But come late afternoon, and into the evening, the P1 comes into its own, and delights with its bigscreen presentati­on, its image quality, flexibilit­y and smarts at this price, which outcompete anything else at this price.

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