Ah, now here is the review I’ve been waiting for. The Sony VPL-VW100 has a buzz factor that’s right off the scale, and I mentioned it on my HD Buzz page. Now ultimate AV finally got their hands on a pre-production version of this beauty, and have made their report. Because they couldn’t calibrate it, they are splitting their review into two parts.
Let’s dig in, shall we?
Yay!
As I mentioned in my Cine4Home VPL-VW100 review, this set does indeed accept 1080p signals. Rejoice all future HD DVD, Blu-ray, and PS3 owners! According the ultimate AV, it will accept 1080p/60 on both the HDMI and DVI inputs. I didn’t know a single DVI connection was capable of this (I thought you needed two.) Interesting…
The review mentions a vertical lens shift feature, but not a horizontal one. This conflicts with what I reported on in the other review mentioned above. The Cine4Home review said that horizontal lens shift was done with screw driver, so maybe the ultimate AV folks didn’t know about it.
The unit is exceptionally quiet, something the Cine4Home review mentioned as well.
Black level. Ah, the black level. Cine4Home raved about it, and ultimate AV does as well, when testing a scene from Master and Commander:
But never once did I see anything in the sequence that hinted at that dreaded gray fog signaling a projector that just can’t go black enough. Blacks looked truly black, but in a way that make them appear to be part of a real scene and not some opaque, digital void. That’s a difficult distinction to describe in words, but you know it instantly when you see it.
He says that the blacks are better than any projector he’s seen that doesn’t cost upwards of $60k, including CRTs! Now that’s a good black!
Hmm, what else is there? A sharp yet creamy-smooth image. What about HD imagery?
As great as a good DVD looks, high definition on the Sony looks even better, with a consistency between 1080i and 720p that eludes most 1280×720p projectors (which usually look at least a little better with a 720p source). The color is superb (even pre-calibration), the detail such that the projector almost crosses that “looking out a window” barrier (I have yet to see a display that unequivocally does), and those blacks provide a punchier image than I recall even from the QUALIA 004. In short, it’s a picture that makes me fear for the future usefulness of my 1000+ DVD collection (and makes me sympathize with those having huge collections of LPs that they’ll never be able to replace with CDs—even if they wanted to.
Interestingly, he recommends a screen size of no more than 100″ diagonal (with a gain of 1.3).
Nay!
The remote doesn’t have any direct input buttons. Yup, quite annoying, isn’t it? And while the black levels are exceptional, they’re slightly uneven. The picture is a little lighter in the corners. Also, the unit had a weird glitch that showed up a couple times, but it probably a pre-production issue.
Conclusion.
Mr. Norton hasn’t even had the projector calibrated yet and he’s already gushing about it. No, not just gushing, recommending!
But if you can’t wait, I see little downside in taking the plunge. Those yet to be completed measurements may reveal a flaw or two we haven’t discovered yet, but it will take an earthquake (just kidding, San Andreas), to shake my enthusiasm for the VPL-VW100 so far.
Now I need to tell my wife what my next big purchase will be. Hmmm… if I can save $100 a month, how long would that take?
Ultimate AV - Sony VPL-VW100 SXRD Video Projector Part I
PS - Here’s Part 2 of the review.