Sunday, August 4, 2013

Mitsubishi HD1000U High Definition 720p DLP Home Theater Projector



#6 Mitsubishi HD1000U High Definition 720p DLP Home Theater Projector





Versatility comes with the latest DLP Brilliant Color technology. BrilliantColor uses a new color-processing algorithm to move beyond standard 3-color processing to a 6-color process that more accurately captures the true color common in video and nature scenes. The technology enables a greater than 50% brightness increase in mid-tone images for video projectors. If you're a hi-definition video enthusiast who's been looking for a more affordable way to bring front-screen projection to your home theater or family room, the HD1000U DLP home theater projector is what you've been looking for. This 720p format, native 16: 9 HD projector is just right for you, even if you don't have a dedicated room for home theater. The HD1000 projects at 1500 lumens and includes advanced color technology and bring you the picture quality you want. One of the keys to Mitsubishi's HD1000 design is a seven-segment color wheel. The design gives you a faster picture refresh (4x speed) plus an additional boost of white that will saturate your screen with true-to-life color and smooth motion. The HD1000 HD projector also features BrilliantColor for DLP technology, a new color-processing algorithm that moves beyond standard 3-color processing to a 6-color process that more accurately captures the true color in video and natural scenes. The technology enables a greater than 50% brightness increase in mid tone images that projects uniform brightness and color into every corner of your screen. From source to screen, Mitsubishi makes sure you get a pure connection with a choice of HDMI or component cable connectors and true 10-bit processing. The 720p HDTV format brings you 720 lines of vertical resolution transmitted at one time, as opposed to interlaced formats, so your HD projector can produce more clarity for fast motion events such as sports. Mount it on a wall or place it on a table, then square the picture with digital keystone correction if needed.





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