Was ist der unterschied zwischen benq mp610 und mp610-b5a

From BenQ —   BenQ MP610 provides the preface color reproduction by meeting the sRGB guideline and creates an undisturbed environment by whisper quiet operation of 25dB. Furthermore, the 9 sets of Application Mode feature offers the best image quality to fulfill your different image requirements. It just works so right to meet your business and personal entertainment needs.

  • 2000 ANSI Lumens
  • SVGA Native Resolution
  • 2000:1 High Contrast Ratio
  • Whisper Quiet 25 dB (Eco. Mode)
  • Golden Ratio Color Wheel (5 Segments)
  • Color Matching Technology
  • sRGB with NTSL Certificate
  • Quick Cooling

Putting out a tremendous 1800 ANSI lumens at settings tailored to presentation, the MP610 is by far the brightest projector in this shootout. Conference rooms usually have some ambient light, and in brighter rooms with larger screens, higher lumen output is needed to prevent the image from becoming washed out. One important thing to note is that, contrary to popular belief, more lumens do not automatically make a better projector. Too many lumens in too small of a space, or on too small of a screen, can cause headaches for your audience. If you plan on using your projector in a small room, aim for a lower lumen output. The lumen output on the MP610 is easily adjustable, by either switching to eco-mode or turning down white peaking. In eco-mode lumen output is around 1500 ANSI lumens, while the MP610 can be set to display video optimally at 730 ANSI lumens. This should help compensate for any small rooms you may encounter.

Brightness uniformity, however, is only around 65%, which is below average. This is the lowest in the group, but still acceptable for data use. And chances are no one will ever notice in a conference room with ambient light.

Most computers these days are using monitors displaying native 1024x768, or XGA. To display one of these signals, all of the information in the XGA picture must be compressed into an SVGA frame. The BenQ MP610 handles this well, without excessive fuzziness in the image. Text remains legible from across the room, and JPEG pictures look none the worse for wear. This projector would be acceptable for use with text and photos, but it would be best to avoid intricately detailed diagrams or spreadsheets if these need to be compressed from XGA.

While the MP610 does not have any sort of independent color control (for separately adjusting red, green, and blue levels), color out of the box was very close to 6500K across the grayscale and very well saturated. High-resolution digital photography, when scaled down, still maintains much of its detail in the MP610, as well as the subtleties in different shades of color.

A common sentiment regarding projectors is that business projectors and home theater projectors should never be confused, as one cannot do the job of the other. While this is mostly true, we've found that several of these mobile projectors can display video material quite well, considering their price and intended purpose. The BenQ MP610 gave excellent results. When given a 480-line interlaced video signal, such as a DVD or cable television, the projector displays the footage with a minimum of deinterlacing artifacts, good color and contrast, and excellent snap. Shadow details are clearly visible in dark scenes. Video is, in short, a pleasure to watch.

On a side note, while 2x speed color wheels (which every projector in this shootout contains, except Epson's LCD projector) do not seem to cause problems in data presentations, they do cause trouble for some people when viewing video, and so precautions should be taken. If you intend to use one of these models as a weekend movie machine, we would recommend sitting back at least 2.5x the screen width from the projected image. In addition to reducing the inter-pixel gap on some of these models, it also reduces the number of rapid movements that your eye must make, and thereby cuts down on rainbows. And when you think about it, sitting 10 feet away from a standard 36" color TV is putting you at over 4x the screen width, so this is a significant upgrade.

Keystone adjustment on the MP610 is clean and sharp. There is a bit of the "bolding effect" that tends to occur when data pictures are scaled, but it does not decrease legibility. JPEG images do not lose much of their clarity, if any.

At 29 dB, the MP610 is nearly silent. In eco-mode the projector is even quieter, and will not pose a problem if you need to be heard over a room's ambient noise. The projector also has a shutdown time of approximately 30 seconds, during which it is similarly quiet. Audible noise will rarely, if ever, be a problem with the MP610.

The MP610's remote is tiny, about the size of three credit cards in a stack. It can easily be carried in a shirt or pants pocket, and has page up/page down buttons for the MP610's USB connection (the projector can advance your powerpoint slideshow for you).

With a lamp life of 3,000 hours in standard mode and 4,000 hours in eco-mode, the BenQ MP610 could be used for four hours a day, every day of the week, and still last nearly three years. A replacement lamp costs $399, so plan ahead and budget accordingly. If, however, you can find a purchase deal that includes a spare lamp (several are available), you will probably upgrade to a new projector before you need to buy an additional lamp. The projector is also under warranty from BenQ for one year after purchase.

The BenQ MP610 is excellent for applications involving video or photography, as many projectors in this extremely low price bracket are not capable of doing such signals justice. The MP610 displays text well also, but it seems like a waste of the projector's considerable abilities.