Homebrewed LCD Projectors 208
pseudofrog writes: "Seems the new thing to do may be to build your own LCD projector. For a couple hundred bucks, some guys are making projectors similar to the professional ones that cost thousands. And it looks pretty simple, too."
Cost of the bulbs? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:3, Interesting)
I got a dozen bulbs (4000 lumens) for my setup for about $75.
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:2)
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:1)
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:1)
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:3, Informative)
The high lumen projectors have 3 things special about the bulbs. 1 is point light source. Light from a point can be focused with the mirror to get most of the light to the LCD's instead of scattering. (A mag light can be focuesd to a bright narrow beam. a flourescent tube can not focus tightly and is not useful for projectors). Porjector lamps are usualy manufactured as a prefocused assembly so it is user installable without a difficult alignment procedure.
2 is a cold mirror. The light from the bulb has to hit a cold mirror reflector to get to the LCD's removing the IR component. This allows a higher power bulb to be used without killing the LCD's. The light from the arc does not directly go to the LCD. The end of the bulb with a terminal faces the LCD's shielding them from the IR output of the bulb. Cold mirrors are not inexpensive. Try buying one.
3 is it is a discharge lamp. This produces more visable light over an incandecent lamp of the same power. Discharge lamps are usualy rated for 2000 hours instead of the typical 8-24 hours for a 3400 degree incandecent. They also have better daylight color tempeture (5600 degree typical) for better color so the pictures can provide a true rendition of the blue screen of death.
Re:Cost of the bulbs? (Score:1)
Bingo. LCD projector manufacturers know they are on the gravy train and they like it. Also, some projectors use regular Halogen bulbs, those are MUCH cheaper but the projectors themselves tend to be of low quality (and will only work in small rooms).
Simple? (Score:1)
Re:Simple? (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyone got a clue on this? It looks to me like those incandescent bulbs would destroy the image. At the very least the light coming from those bulbs would have to make two trips through each LCD, so the color density would be off. Not to mention the fact that those light bulbs being off to the side would not tend to radiate light that the LCD monitor would direct out of the box. Looks like someone put a lot of work into the design, but it's wrong.
Re:Simple? (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure the design wouldn't work, even with a reflective LCD like in handhelds (or the Gameboys). Well it might work a little with one light source and the LCD screen aimed to reflect the light from this one source to the mirror. Then the light moves the correct direction, but you no longer have a flat surface to focus so the projected image would always be out of focus except for one line.
But this hypothesis is moot, the plans specifically state he's using a standard LCD video screen, so he's probably more good talk than good design.
LCD/oLEDs (Score:1)
Just think, you could have the Windows "Clouds" wallpaper all over your room! Imagine that! Gee, if that were my wallpaper, I know I'd feel like I was actually in the clouds.
Hargun
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:5, Funny)
Really? If I had the Windows "Clouds" wallpaper all over my room, I'd feel like I was in Hell!
Moderation Totals: Flamebait=1, Troll=1, Total=2.
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:2, Funny)
You wouldn't be able to make out what that is. The wallpaper is 640*480, 16 colors. Imagine this scaled to the size of your room, if it starts looking bad on a big monitor already...
;)
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:2, Funny)
Now this is actually benefitial to me, since my walls are the same ones that came with the appartment and the can't support anything higher than that... something about the reflectivity or texture not too sure I kinda zoned out when the tech guy started using those "big words". I'll probably upgrade one of these days.
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:2)
1. Linux isn't perfect; but it's open, and that's much more important if you know what you're doing.
2. No matter how smart a user is, he can't fix the fundamental flaws in Windows. I've been developing software for Win32 (Win9x/NT/2000/...) since 1992, and I can tell you that the platform sucks in myriad ways, a large number of which don't apply on Linux.
When Microsoft stops designing the OS to restrict the user's choices and to make life more difficult for competing developers, perhaps Windows will become less sucky. Until that cold day in hell arrives, you're going to hear a lot of complaints from people who know much more than you do about it.
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:1)
Re: Windows Clouds background (Score:1)
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:2)
Re:LCD/oLEDs (Score:1)
Seriously, you'd think a $36b company could manage to hire a decent wallpaper artist.
Hargun
Woohoo! (Score:1)
well if its dark in the room and you have enough windowless wall space anyway and enough room to put the projector and .. and.... Well on second thought, back to the drawing board
Re:Woohoo! (Score:1)
ymmmm 4mm pixels!! It'll be really good for playing those Atari 2600 games in Mame.
Cool projection? (Score:1)
Output too low (Score:1)
The only advantage you would get is heat dissipated, because 1000's of the buggers would chew, oh say, hundreds of watts anyway.
Someone made a projector from lasers and mirror systems, but they are again, hundreds of times brighter, and can be directly modulated, but the 'pictures' are 'liney', scanlines showing everywhere. Unless you have a screen that amplifies the light, the LED idea just doesn't work.
http://www.nofs.navy.mil/about_NOFS/staff/cbl
Navy specs on light sources, look halfway down
Re:Cool projection? (Score:1)
If you want cool light put the lights in a seperat compartment cooled by its own fan. IE pipe the light in. The box with the LCD must be either silver or pure white inside to not turn light into heat. Any dark spot will generate heat.
I love these "why not concepts!" Keeps the mind active and thinking.
A very long time ago though of mounting a monitor over a photocopier to make a printer.
Re:Cool projection? (Score:2)
Here [howstuffworks.com] is a great Howstuffworks page on LCOS. This article [howstuffworks.com] is about the general workings of all projection TV's.
Already slashdotted. (Score:3, Funny)
/.ed Already (Score:1, Redundant)
Mmm (Score:1, Insightful)
Is this another 50 feet Giant TV like project.
Without seeing the end result I won't spend money trying it.
Reasons for Skepticism (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting. Now is this confined to hobbyists because the LCD companies are too slow-moving to have thought of it first? Or is the whole idea fundamentally flawed?
What I'd really want to see in the article is: Joe Blow built his own LCD projector for $350, and the image quality is better than what a good projection-screen television delivers.
Instead, there are lots of plans from hobbyists making their own, but no clear word about whether even the best of these designs produces an acceptable image.
One key thing: most of these designs call for a miniature 800x600 LCD monitor. Once projected onto a wall, how does that compare to the dots per inch of a regular projection TV? I bet it doesn't compare favorably at all.
The big question I came away with after reading this is: why aren't the big LCD companies developing this kind of product? Maybe it's an idea that, even with big-budget R&D, won't produce an acceptably good image.
Re:Reasons for Skepticism (Score:5, Informative)
I also got a 72" wide screen for $75 retail, but a flat white wall will do almost as well.
The quality on the system with DScaler is very impressive at 1024x768. The only difference in parts between what I have an the author of the linked site is that I've not tried putting it all in a box. Currently it all sites on an end table next to my couch and projects onto a screen which hangs down from rafters. I see no reason why putting in a box would make a difference in the quality. It would probably make it better by blocking out extraneous light that escapes from the overhead projector.
Now while the quality is excellent (you have to play with the brightness/contrast to get a good picture), there are quite a few drawbacks that don't have to do with image quality:
My setup could use a little more CPU power. A better graphic card would be good too 'cause I had to settle on a Geforce 2 MX 200 because it was the best half height video card I could find. Also a sound card with a dolby decoder would make it even better.
It does work, 'though, and looks great, but as you can see it's not perfect.
-dameron
Re:Reasons for Skepticism (Score:1)
Re:Reasons for Skepticism (Score:1)
I do share this concern; namely that the quality will be fairly poor -- but sometimes it's nice to have a very large image, even if the quality is sub par. For me, the question is if the quality is bad, or really really bad.
Re:Reasons for Skepticism (Score:2)
"why aren't the big LCD companies developing this kind of product?" - prehaps they feel the market's too small to warrant the investment in researching a new product.
Re:Comparing apples and oranges.. (Score:2)
Single LCD projector will never be as efficent as a 3 LCD projector because....
Red light must pass thru a red pixel in a single color LCD. This means all the white light that hits green and blue pixels is NOT adding to the brightness of the red. This absorbtion of the 2 colors not passed by a pixel filter means 2/3 of the light is lost in the filter and turned into heat at the LCD where it is not needed. This alone limits bulb size and projected lumens. In a 3 LCD projector, the light is split into primary colors with beamsplitting dichoric mirrors. Therefore all the red of the white light does hit the red LCD (actualy a B&W LCD without a color filter). The LCD then only changes the polorization of the light. The polorizers take the heat, not the LCD. The polorizers are spaced away from the LCD allowing cooling the polorizers while not heating the LCD unlike a color filtered single panel LCD. The same holds true for green and blue. The 3 beams are then recombined into one beam and exits the lens to the screen. This overlaying of the colors gives true full color pixels, not a color stripe matrix display of adjacent red green blue pixels. The heat not removed by the cold mirror at the lamp is now spread out over 6 polorizers, (one each in front and behind each LCD) not in the one LCD panel. This allows a brighter light source to be used.
Now the simple math..
Light not absorbed by pixle filters, but routed to proper LCD = 3 X brighness. Point source arc lamp with cold mirror = 4 X more visable light per watt. 6 polorizers instead of one pannel to lose the heat = 6 X brighter bulb can be used. Polorizers seprate from LCD keeping heat away = 4 X more watts in heat can be safely absorbed without overheating the LCD's. 1/2 light absorbed by polorizers 1/2 (OK it does lose light)
The totals
Dichoric splitters 3X
6 polorizers 6X, 4X, 1/2X
Arc lamp 4X more usable light
Total 144 times brighter projected lumens.
Any incandecent light source single LCD projector will not come anywhere close to the 3 LCD arc lamp commercial projector in projected lumens for these reasons. A commercial one can be used on a trade show floor, where a home built will never overcome the ambient light.
Re:Reasons for Skepticism (Score:2)
I'm saleried, so it doens't matter how many hours I work (over 40) in a week I get the same pay. If I was paid by the hour it might be worth working longer hours to buy a commerical model. However I don't get paid more for working more (unless they give me a raise, to compensate, but they rarely pay attention to that)
What I'm saying is I can't afford to spend $5000 on a toy, but I can spend a few hundred on it, and I will learn something in the process.
Could this have helped save some dotcoms? (Score:2, Funny)
Now, they only had two projectors... imagine how many some of the bigger dotcoms must have had, and how much money could have been saved had this been out earlier!
Yea, but... (Score:1)
Re:Could this have helped save some dotcoms? (Score:1)
Google Cache Link (Score:1)
zerg (Score:2)
By simple are we talking about some of our fellow slashdotters hook the rest of us up, or are we talking simple for millionaire phds.
Re:zerg (Score:2)
-Paul Komarek
Almost did the same thing (Score:3, Interesting)
Then I bought a smashed laptop screen for 5$ to get the backlight out.
Put the two together and I got a 15$ LCD monitor, this is fine for messing around with older gear like the Commodore 64, or a PC in 800x600, which the LCD panel can scale.
I'm pretty happy.
CAUTION: Raw LCD panels are very sensitive to static discharge! Use a wrist strap.
How Dissapointing... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How Dissapointing... (Score:2, Informative)
BTW I am not responbile for anything resulting from this message.
Google cache (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Google cache (Score:1)
The page isn't slashdotted just yet though...
Why did I say that - it's probably being destroyed now...
Re:Google cache (Score:2)
My house (Score:1)
Re:My house (Score:1)
Weren't the big eyeballs in Doom II?
Mirror Here (Score:3, Informative)
Another link (Score:2)
A link from the main site: DIY LCD Projector [rr.com]
BTW...My office just picked up a NICE LCD thingy. It has 4 video inputs, 2 computer inputs (displayed PIP-style or side-by-side), and a 100mbps ethernet switch. We paid close to $10k. In my opinion, it was worth every penny. I'd rather spend $10k on something worth it than $500~~$1000 on something not worth it.
Re:Another link (Score:2)
If I had a lazy $10k i'd agree
But all my $10k's are going to be pretty busy for the forseeable future.
as it is i might just have a lazy $500.
that makes this more interesting to me than your companies new toy.
Re:Another link (Score:2)
Re:Another link (Score:2)
aside from that needs are rarely absolute, and wants even more so.
in my case, my friends and I often borrow projection units from our employers for the weekend and play 4 player playstation games on the PS2 blown up onto a wall.
We like doing that.
I don't like it enough to pay $10,000 for a unit of my own.
I might well like it enough to chip in $150 each with my friends and spend a weekend arseing around trying to build one.
I frequently spend money on things I don't need, be it the ps2 or my motorcycle.
I have $500 for something I want.
I don't have $10,000.
OK?
diyaudio.com (Score:2, Informative)
diyAudio [diyaudio.com]
Dunno.. (Score:2)
As a side note, I'm looking at setting up my home theater to proper levels, and if these projectors display a good image, they seem to be a much more viable solution. Any one have suggestions regarding this? It seems that getting a 1000 lumens projecjtor that can do up to 720p isn't too unreasonable compared to any CRT or projection based TV solution. Is 1000 lumens sufficient? I'm specifically looking at the Mitsubishi SL1U Projector. I'm aware that watching TV/movies with such a system will naturally require a low level of ambient light, but two things are very cool about this.
1) Pretty much as big a screen as I want, provided distance in the room. Speaking of which, how far back is needed to get, say, a 60-70" image? Again, having seating so as not to get in the way of the projector is another issu...
2) When I move, large TVs are so unmanagable. The projector, and possibly a screen (maybe just use a white wall, provided the wall is smooth and white enough) Projector is on the order of 6-10 pounds, and the screen would be also manageable..
Who all has experience with this? My current rig is an old 24" console TV from the 80s with gaussed spots all over and annoyingly cropped image, so it wouldn't take much to impress me.
Re:Dunno.. (Score:3, Informative)
Allowing the bulb to heat soak is just as bad as running it without cooling.
David
Re:Dunno.. (Score:1)
Re:Dunno.. (Score:1)
This assumes a 65" diagonal screen.
For 4:3:
(3x)^2 + (4x)^2 = 4225
9x^2 + 16x^2 = 4225
25x^2 = 4225
x^2 = 169
x=13
That makes the screen height 39"
NTSC (interlaced) - back 156" (13 feet) to 273" (22 feet 9 inches)
SD DTV (progressive) - 97.5" (8 feet 1.5 inches)
For 16:9
(9x)^2 + (16x)^2 = 4225
81x^2 + 256x^2 = 4225
337x^2 = 4225
x^2 = 12.5370919881305637982195845697329
x = 3.54077561956848146706813581221355
That makes the screen height 31.9"
For HDTV - 79.75" (6 feet 7.75 inches)
Re:Dunno.. (Score:2)
Ignoring the fact that you have no units and too many significant figures (now I know why the engineering curriculum rides us so hard on labeling and s.f.'s), it looks like you calculated the height of a screen with a 65" diagonal but after that I'm lost. Is there something in there I'm missing, or are you flexing your basic algebra muscles?
other than hack value.... why? (Score:4, Informative)
and these dont need a computer, just plug in composite video.. (I can hear it now the videophiles that have their 2048p projectors that use fiberoptic digital video and HDTV ready HD-DVD players will whine that it's grainey,low light because it's lower than 95,000 lumens and doesnt have glass lenses made by Plossol in germany... Go to hell videophiles..)
The dayton hamfest is coming up very soon, you can get a (GASP) old technology video-tube projection tv for probably less than $300.00 that works fine. (granted, it's a coffee table, but hey...)
the golden rule is that you scroung for a used one first, then look for cheap new, and THEN create it by hand.
Re:other than hack value.... why? (Score:2)
Re:other than hack value.... why? (Score:2, Informative)
The original ones last for thousands of hours.
Re:other than hack value.... why? (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, but when the next one comes up, then you can get it, or I can get it, but we can't both get it.
I always have a bit of a chuckle at these "Build X for only $Y!", when Y is based on some completely arbitrary cost for a strictly limited supply of used hardware. And of course, every person who reads this (the original article or your suggestion) and thinks "I'll do that!" will hit eBay and drive the price up.
Sorry guys, but if you're not quoting a retail source, you're just blueskying. We can't all buy/build for bargain prices.
Re:other than hack value.... why? (Score:2)
I can get them all day long for from $300-600 depending on quality.. Business auctions happen almost every day.. try checkin out purchase options that require the NON-use of a computer and the horrible task of going outdoors.
(Last business auction I went to.. wire welder that retail costs $3500.00 I got for $125.00... computer equuipment usually goes for 3-5 cents on the dollar.)
DIY discussion (Score:3, Informative)
Does it work really? (Score:5, Interesting)
This project looks nice if I can find someone to do it for me that is.
I have a few concerns though.
1) Aren't dvd players using Macrovision to forbid a signal to be output on anything else than a TV? The signal going to a video capture card seems to be a slight problem. Is this a reason why every one in the article is talking about LD and VCD, these two older media not suffering of the Macrovision "virus", er copy protection.
2) Is this really cheap? I mean a dedicated P800 in the living room (cpu speed to cope with descaler complex algorithm)+capture card+LCD panel, etc... I don't even mention the electric bill.
3) Noise level: Getting a Pentium noisy as an air carrier next to a TV and adding the noise of the fan(s) for cooling down the bulb(s), does that meant that I will need to listen to the movie with a pair a noise cancelling headphones?
4) Space: I imagine that the distance from the projector to the screen needs to be consequent. I can't find data regarding the minimum size of a room to use the projector.
I still like the idea though.
PPA, the girl next door.
Re:Does it work really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does it work really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does it work really? (Score:1)
It is if it's been built in the past while. The only video capture board I own unaffected by macrovision (and completely unable to be affected -- thanks ATI for cheaping out and buying the shitty chip!) is an old ATI-ISA TV card with the Bt819 chip. It can't record the VBI signals (where the macrovision colour burst is stored) so they can't be checked.
Macrovision does nothing to a video capture card, however modern cards and software record the VBI signal and will check to see if Macrovision is present. If it is, you can watch it on a monitor, but you can't record it or output it to a TV (unless your output supports Macrovision generation, like most do nowadays in support of the MPAA).
The solution today? Find an old card that either can't support checking for Macrovision / find an old card that has hacked drivers (Matrox Rainbow Runner!) / run an OS that doesn't care (Linux) / or, as mentioned, buy the $50 Macrovision stripper (this might not work for DVD players, though, since they support a stronger version of Macrovision output. If the $50 "video stabilizer" won't do the trick, buy a $200 Time Base Corrector -- this removes ALL forms of Macrovision, isn't patented or in any way illegal, and, as a side benefit are reported to improve video capture synch a LOT).
:-)
Re:Does it work really? (Score:1)
I had to do this for my own setup, which originally had an old TV that couldn't handle two inputs, so I had to feed the DVD through the VCR. Macrovision screwed up the color badly when I did that. I used a software solution ("Universal Selector"), and it works great.
I use a PII-450 in my living room, and performance is fine. It has minimal fans and isn't too noisy. I have a Hollywood DVD MPEG hardware decoder, so that helps, since the video for movies comes out of that card, not from the PC. I bought a commercial LCD projector though.
The space (distance from screen) simply determines how big your projected image is. You have to take the entire room size into account, where the seating is, etc. Depending on what we're doing, we sometimes put the projector in between us and the wall/screen, and sometimes behind the sofa. Behind gives a much bigger picture, but it's fainter in bright light, so for everyday use (as opposed to movies where you dim the lights and crank up the Dolby 5.1 surround sound), we have it closer. If you check the specs for commercial projectors, some of them give you these details.
If you have a really small room, the size of your screen may not be worth the trouble. But if you can manage at least about 7 feet to 14 feet, you'll be looking at image sizes that are plenty big - easily up to 100" or more.
I don't think you can really do this kind of stuff very cheaply and get good results. The point as I see it is more to get quality that rivals or exceeds that of your local cinema. You can get in that ballpark for a few thousand dollars these days, although you have to make some compromises at that level.
Macrovision Notes (Score:2, Informative)
This fools AGC (Automatic Gain Control) circuits into thinking they have a very bright picture, and so they reduce the gain. By varying the signal you can make the picture brightness pulse, or in some cases cause it to loose track of the synchronisation all together.
Conventional display devices don't have to have such accurate control of the gain of the signal, so are not very heavily effected, although it is possible to see the effects on some devices. You could see the high amplitude bursts, but these occur in the 'off screen' section of the field that holds the sync signals, and stuff like teletext - if you have vertical hold then you might be able to see them.
(For a great technical and non-technical explanation check Repair FAQ [repairfaq.org] for an easy explanation check How Stuf Works [howstuffworks.com])
Now originally this was intended to specifically block VHS style recorders, but as things have developed there is another device now in common use that can be effected, that wasn't around in consumer products when MacroVision was invented - the frame store.
These are handy digital devices that read the composite video signal in and store it in real time. The video can then be read out in any format you want. Why would you want to do this?
1) Stabilise the signal
2) Change video formats from 50/60 interlaced fields.
Now the first one is done during video editing so that different sources can be synchronised and things like picture in picture and wipe effects between 2 video sources will actually work. They are also now common in good prosumer VCR's for this reason. Digital camcorders have them by default because of point 2...
The second point is that it allows you to do standards conversion in real time - such as in a capture card where you digitise the signal to a different frame rate.
And here is the point - digital projectors such as LCD and DLP tend to use progressive scan rather than interlaced signals, so they contain conversion technology including frame stores to do the de-interlacing (good notes at SourceForge [sourceforge.net])
So any device that uses a frame store approach can be effected by MacroVision, it just depends on how good the AGC in the framestore is.
How do you avoid this? Simple really don't use a video signal that can have MacroVision on it. If you have RGB (component) then this won't have protection, and is the superior connection anyway for a projector. The S-Video source is normally ok as it seperates the chrominance and luminancne (colour and brightness) signals - although I've heard of a new 'level 2' MacroVision that can disrupt this - sorry no tech details on that I'm still looking, but I think it has to do with messing about with the chrominance.
Of course the fact you regenerate the signal from the framestore means a good one is able to strip the MacroVision out, but there are cheaper ways to do that, and no I'm not giving the links - spend 2 minutes on Google [google.com], and remember that MacroVision is specific to PAL/NTSC so don't go ordering abroad! A good legal reason to have such a device is to connect a non AV socket TV to a non RF output player via a normal VCR, or to connect a projector sensitive to MacroVision when you don't have RGB Component output. Of course in the US you will fall foul of the DMCA, but we already know what a mess that is!
Make it even cheaper (Score:2, Informative)
1: 6mmx7mm LCD screen (don't know if they can be made that small with decent resolution for a reasonable price)
2: Beseler 67 Photo enlarger
3: Bank of 4-8 halogen lights (or a single car headlight?)
4: Maybe a lens to focus the bank of lights
The correct wiring and such to make all of it work. The Beseler will already have the correct lens for focusing a screen of that size, and if you replace the standard enlarger lamp with something like a couple of car headlamps or something, you can probably squeeze out enough light (with a lot of life to the lamp too) to get a decent display in a dimly lit room...
Approximate cost (given a good day on ebay): $200
Re:Make it even cheaper (Score:1)
interresting... (Score:3, Interesting)
When I see people buying HDTV TVs at C$5000+ I don't understand why they aren't looking a medium range projector with HDTV support. Okay you don't buy anything under XGA resolution because with all the resampling it'll screw up the quality big time, but still, at 5K you have a nice tv, but at 5K you have a BIG refurb projector that can do both progressive playback of your dvd, give you an image that has easily 4 time the area covered, and best of all, you can play quake at wall size!.
In my case I've been trying to grab a cheap DLP XGA projector for a while, I don't want a 60 inch tv that will be a pain to move around, I want a 90 inch "tv" that I'll be able to plug my computer on it and also have fun watching movies like in the theatre
The replacement lamps are very expensive, but then again, when you look at the "kit" they sell you for 400$, it's basically a specific lamp with specific properties (metal halide, etc etc) at a specific voltage, plus a little crappy plastic holder... there's no optics (you read "lamp module" you'd think it has some collimating lenses or something) and you can buy these same lamps from a third party at 1/5th of the price, and you just have to mount it back on the plastic thing that was attaching the old lamp. If you have to break it, so what, nothing a high-temperature epoxy can't fix.
Anyways, nice to see articles like that, but LCD sucks, DLP is the way to go for video projectors, too bad parts are still expensive, anyone here knows a 3rd party supplier that won't only sell developper kits at 3K$?
Re:interresting... (Score:2)
I've also been looking into buying one, and everything seems to agree that LCD had the edge over DLP - DLP is smaller, lighter, cheaper, but (a good) LCD apparently has the edge in image quality.
The best projectors seem to be LCD, though there are pro's and cons to each. (Eg, LCD has space between pixels, while DLP colours seperate when your eye cicades from one one area of the picture to another because they use a spinning colour wheel instead of 3 seperate chips) and so on.
Since DLP projectors seem significantly cheaper than LCD, it'd be great if they were better - so please tell me what you've heard.
I'm thinking that even if LCD is better for some things, what I want a projector for is (1) Quake & (2) DVDs, so if DLP is as good or better than LCD for just those things, that would rock.
(I can only afford one of these - so I have to get the choice right BEFORE I buy)
Re:interresting... (Score:2)
With LCDs, there is a prism that splits the light to extract the red, green and blue. The color wheel concept with "one chip" DLPs only allow one of those colors in the spectrum through.
DLP projectors typically run from 1000-1500 hours on a very pricy bulb. An LCD projector often runs 2000-3000, and in some cases, as high as 5000 hours in economy mode, and the bulbs don't cost any more.
DLPs are just now getting an edge in what is called contrast ratio, the ratio of the blackest black to the brightest white. LCDs currently max out to 700:1 at best, single chip DLPs can go much higher, I think there are some stock units that are rated at 1000:1, 1200:1, with modifications, some are getting 1800:1, this is due to the simplified optical path where there aren't as many optical elements to scatter light. Three chip DLPs have those elements and can't go as high in contrast ratio.
The biggest problem is that the color wheel concept causes "rainbowing" and because it is composed of very high speed color flashes of red, green and blue, it cause headaches and fatigue in some people. It can take weeks to acclimate to them, but most people don't get enough exposure to acclimate, so it may not be worth the effort if you plan to have a lot of guests.
Re:interresting... (Score:2)
I've seen LCD and DLP side-by-side in a local mall and the DLP seemed to kick ass in a fairly bright environment. Now obviously there are hundreds of variables that aren't accounted for in my casual observation, but I'm surprised to hear someone who has seen DLP (wait, have you seen it?) suggest it's inferior to LCD. Everything I've seen and heard is quite the opposite --ie, DLP kicks ass over LCD in every regard and is likely to dominate the projector market within in the next few years. But I've been reading a lot of MEMs stuff and demos are easily rigged, so perhaps it's just hype. Nonetheless, I did see one that looked nice and sharp as wide as a theater screen in an environment that made LCDs look like crap.
I've also seen some very expensive DLP boxes on the web, so I don't think you can safely assume that DLP is only a bargain solution. Besides, if you're assuming that it's not as good because it's cheaper, you might consider the manufacturing technique of the DLP being a significant advantage over LCD. So far, my understanding is that TI is still asking a bit much in licensing for the cheapskate interests in Taiwan --bless their stingy little hearts-- to jump into it, but when the price looks right for both parties, I'm assuming these DLPs are going to crash the LCD party in a big way which is just as well because that party has been charging too much at the door all along and there's no sign of prices dropping precipitously with such shoddy, labor intensive manufacturing processes. How can such a process compete against a chip based solution except through FUD?
Here's an idea: (Score:1)
i have dozens of old CRT's around for hacking.
could i just put a fresnel lense on one and aim it at a lense, then at a wall?
Re:Here's an idea: (Score:1)
Re:Here's an idea: (Score:3, Interesting)
A guy I know has done this. Yes, it works. Yes, it's too dim to make very much bigger than the CRT.
He used it to project the visual swirly displays things of mp3 players onto the ceiling (dark room) at a party. That's probably the best use for it. Cheap and easy though - all you need is a fresnal lense
quality of the output (Score:2, Insightful)
Derek
Descaler? Huh? (Score:2)
Television Ideas (Score:1)
I've been wanting to get an LCD projector for my living room, after playing with one from a club a year or so ago (the unit was already 3 years old). In average lighting in a friends house, we projected a TV image that was beautiful, from about 10 feet away, which made an image approx 5 feet tall.
I don't want to spend the $3k+ to buy one from the store, but I'm more than willing to spend less than $100 on a small handheld LCD TV and junk store movie/slide projector.
I'll post to Slashdot if it works. "Hacker Makes LCD TV/VGA projector for $100", with results.
Does it have to be so complex? (Score:2)
Re:Does it have to be so complex? (Score:1)
a) mechanically somewhat fragile - if it slipped/shoved off the projector, it cost
b) the LCD diminished lumination a fair bit which reduced screen contrast in ambient conditions
c) did I mention cost and fragility of backlight?
A good idea which could and should have been improved.
LL
Re:Does it have to be so complex? (Score:2)
What you gain with my idea is high resolution. For ~800USD you should be able to get a good overhead projector and a quality 15" LCD that will give you 1024x768. Even many high end LCD projectors can only do 800x600 which makes them completely unusable as a replacement for a monitor.
Re:Does it have to be so complex? (Score:2)
Rolls Eyes (Score:2)
Neat DIY, but really, it pushes forward all the things that are wrong with consumer AV. Low contrast rations, no idea about proper screen materials, poor color, bad scaling...you could go on and on about it.
Scam warning on building the LCD monitor described (Score:5, Informative)
Note that the horizontal resolution is NOT 960 pixels, but rather 320, since they're counting each RGB pixel as THREE pixels (very sneaky indeed).
So just be warned in case you thought this was the deal of the century.
All I can say is... (Score:1)
Dr MPF
Why Bother Projecting the LCD (Score:1)
Encounter w/ Law Enforcement (Score:3, Funny)
GEEK: Well sir, I am a hobbyist, see
COP: interrupts A hobbyist, huh?
GEEK: yes, I am making a homegrown
COP: interrupts homegrown, huh? Son, you have the right to remain silent...
GEEK: LCD PROJECTOR! SIR!!! A HOMEGROWN LCD PROJECTOR!!! YOU KNOW, one of those things that projects computer images on the wall.
COP: Images on the walls. Hmmm...you must be pretty good at your "hobby"
No. (Score:3, Informative)
If you absolutely do not care about video quality, it's easy to get/build a projector on the cheap.
However, today's typical $3500 projector includes:
- A truly full-spectrum lamp. Retail price: $425. Wholesale price: $300. Manufacturing price: $250.
- Built-in line doubler. Most LCDs have 768 vertical pixels; some have 600, some have 1024. DVD's have 525 vertical lines. VHS has something like 240 lines. How do you get from 525 or 240 to 768 or 1024? Anyone who knows anything about computer grahpics will realize that the answer is not "double every 1/X line". Line doublers interpolate lines on the fly.
- Progressive scan support. Again, not a huge big deal, but the way I read the article, not supported.
- Component video in support. Like progressive scan, increasingly critical for decent video.
- Distortion correction, especially trapezoid. It's very rare to be able to project from the geometric center of the screen. Most of us have to live with projecting from the ceiling or floor, and use optical or digital means to correct the image for that.
Sure, you can build a "projector" for $400. Heck, you can probably build one for $100 (see earlier lightbulb, saran wrap, and markers note). But if it were really that easy to produce a home theater quality projector for $1000, don't you think any of the mass producers would have done it? For less than the cost of a one-off? (Anyone who responds that all 8 major projector manufacturers are colluding in price fixing should be laughed at).
Cheers
-b
Improvements I'd suggest (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason for this is that with unpolarised light *half* of that light is just being absorbed by the LCD, and lost. This of course gets turned to heat and reduces the lifetime of your display.
Just buy a used projector (Score:2, Insightful)
Here's another one...
Like New Epson Projector, Remote, Low Reserve [ebay.com]
Many things missing... (Score:3, Informative)
You need a metal halide light bulb and ballast. Metal halide light bulbs are many many times more efficient at turning electricity into light, and thus produce far less heat. They also provide a 'whiter' light than a standard bulb. These are about $200 from hydroponics shops, and range in power from about 200-1000watts.
You need a 'cold filter' to block out the UV rays the light produces. Without this, the ultraviolet rays will actually start killing pixels. This happened to my projector. These little peices of glass alone cost around $200. But without one, you will cook an LCD very quickly, especially with higher powered lights.
By the time you get a decent lense, so you can actually get a decently sized and focussed image, you are starting to get into the sort of money that a decent 2nd hand projector goes for, without all the pitfalls.
Cheap projectors... (Score:2)
1. What do they look like? Depends mainly on the LCD and lens system, not to mention the "case" of the projector. If built right, with good components and a "light tight" case, it can look good. Not great, not HDTV ready, but good enough to watch TV or a video with.
2. Do they work? YES! Built right, they work as they should. LCD projection isn't anything really fancy - it is basically a slide projector with the LCD display substituted for the slide, and the backlight being a very bright lamp. You have to cool the LCD in some way (or polarise the light properly) to keep the LCD from "shutting down".
3. Why do this? I would say it is mainly a hobby, but I would also say it is because most of us can't afford a decent new or used projector. New projectors are hella expensive, and used ones maintain their value, and are thus not that cheap either. The only ones cheap enough are the large CRT projectors, which tend to be real heavy, need to be aligned after moving them, and need special support structures to hang the heavy weight from the ceiling (if that is how you want to mount yours).
I can't say I have ever built one of these projectors, but I can say how they probably look. I currently own a Fujix P401 portable LCD video projector. The thing is about the size of a couple of VHS tapes stacked upon one another, and it uses a small one inch LCD with a halogen lamp (it is a 6 volt halogen reflector lamp that is VERY difficult to find). It takes composite input, and has a system to either project on a small internal screen, or out to an external screen. Built in stereo speakers and the ability to run off of an 8mm video camera battery completes the system.
The quality is OK. At larger image sizes the pixels start to become apparent, but all in all it really isn't that bad of a projector. If I keep the image to around 40-50" diagonal, it is highly watchable (you need to be in a darkened room), great for videos. I have used a VGA->TV convertor successfully with it, and viewed VCDs under KDE.
I would expect a home-brew solution to be as good or better. I would imagine the larger LCDs to be higher resolution, and should give a sharper image at the larger sizes, with less "pixelization" (which really isn't a big deal on my P401).
I honestly don't understand why LCD projector manufacturers don't (or won't) make cheaper, lower-res units. I would think a 640x480 unit would only cost $500-700 - a lot of people would eagerly snatch it up. It could be made compact and lightweight. Make it easy to attach to a computer video card or composite/SVHS inputs. I think it could sell. I have a similar gripe regarding laptops (ie, why not a 640x480 cheap laptop), but now is not the place.
Re:/.'ed Already? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:shut the fuck up (Score:1)
I never claimed the above post was illegal. Reread my reply. Troll.