But not only 3D thrilled, even the rest of Beamer's finest. I have been very pleased with the predecessor (Panasonic AE200 HD-ready, 2500 ANSI lumens), but this is actually again a class. The Beamer looks much brighter than the old one on me, although I currently in the cinema 1 pursuing him Eco mode, which actually reproduces the darkest picture, but it is possible the most natural colors.
There are settings where you could probably lose several weeks to. This goes to gamma curves with about 15 bases for each channel separately. Black and white balance can be adjusted to the HDMI level. And there are for each channel both Waveform Monitor, and signal monitor (like a Osziloskop).
The most beautiful for me: the Eco Mode is such low that it only degrees so just now is perceptible even in absolute silence in the room and concentrated listening.
The Beamer dominated CEC, but that I had to switch off. Even though I had not connected CEC (it was just turned on), my Samsung BD player suddenly communicated itself to the beamer, but completely wrong. "Next Chapter" on BD player has eg advances to the next input at the projector. CEC switched off and true peace again.
If you want to see because what negative:
- He is very tall - hence so quietly that TEHT in direct proportion to each other.
- He's very black - in realistic home theater ideal, in the living room suffering from the WAF (Women Acceptance Factor) including but clearly.
- The 3D glasses are expensive and cause process-related (shutter technique) a minimal flicker.
The negative points big and black are known before DME purchase. That has to stop every superior even if he can handle it.
The negative point with the shutter technique is such a thing:
Of course, the ideal is not necessarily (glasses expensive, difficult, needs electricity, flickers some), but what would be the alternative? At the present state of the art there for Beamer otherwise only the polarization technique. This, however, would require a very expensive silver screen since polarized light is refracted at a normal screen so that it loses its polarization. Since then the shutter technique to me is the bottom line but rather - at least until someone the holy grail of 3D technology discovered (3D without glasses on the big screen).