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Panasonic 1080p Projector: Visions of Heaven, Stratospheric Price

Definitely not in the budget for most home theaters, we think this high-end Panasonic PT-DW10000U 1080p projector might fit nicely into the HGTV Dream Home that the Gizmodo team is anticipating moving into this Sunday when they announce us as the big winners.

For $75,000, it comes with 3-chip DLP, four bulbs rocking 10,000 lumens, 1080p (1920x1080), 5000:1 contrast ratio, and an "auto cleaning robot" to extend filter life to 2000 hours. The unit can operate in temps up to 113 degrees thanks to a liquid cooling system and three big exhaust fans. Could get noisy. Definitely useful for those screening rooms in hell.

6:10 PM on Fri Mar 16 2007
By Charlie White
3,120 views
14 comments

Comments

  • That thing is huge. Somehow it screams "first gen."

  • That is a shitload of lumens. I see this more for movie theater use and not home theater use.

  • I'm quite happy with my $2000 Panasonic thank you.

  • $75K is a bargain, the only other 1080P LCD based projector I've found it Runco's @ $195,000

  • Wait wait wait...

    1) it uses 4 bulbs. Don't those bulbs run about $400 each when they burn out? Pricey.

    2) The filters only last about 2000 hours too? How much are those to replace?

    3) I also imagine that since a typical bright projector consumes about 300Watts, this 4-bulb beast eats about 1200 Watts -- or about 2.5 kilowatt hours per movie.

    Not that anybody spending $75000 would care about these extra expenses...but if they can engineer a robot to clean the filters, you'd think they could engineer a better solution than 4 bigass burny-outy bulbs.

  • Image of homerjay homerjay at 07:10 PM on 03/16/07 *

    Excellent use of the industry term "Burny-outy," EQC.

    I'm surprised to see only one DVI. You'd think they could fit 9 or 10 in that big honkin' box.

  • keep the projector , just send the auto cleaning bot round , my cribs in a right mess

  • ack! 75k! must be geared towards theaters with those bnc inputs and the wack of serial, remote and lan hookups.

    EQC: I think the 2000 hours is the time between when you have to physically clean the filter. My projector has a 100 hour filter life, which just means every 100 hours i have take it out and vacume it. and by the looks of filters on most projectors, i would imagine that they are roughly 25 bucks tops for a new one.

    il take a good Runco for 25k and use the other 50 to build a nice looking theater in my house ;)

  • definitely pro gear.
    but the rs-422, must be for interfacing with given edit/mix theatre's 9-pin system. or is there some other use for rs-422 in a video situation that im not aware of?

  • This is a large venue projector. If you have a theater in your house where you need 10K lumens then you can probably afford this and the projection booth and power needs it has.

    For mere mortals Mitsubishi, Epson and others make great 1080p LCDs well under $10K.

  • FOUR bulbs??? Can it even get close to black or is it just "not quite so white?". That's a SHITEload of light. Found the specs, 4000:1 contrast... yeah that blows.

  • That'd be a static contrast ratio, Bagel, and a good one too. The dynamic contrast ratios quoted for consumer LCD projectors rely on trickery involving human persistance of vision, and their contrast ratio on any given frame wouldn't be anywhere near 4000:1. DLPs divert light entirely for dark pixels so by their nature they have good black detail.

  • rs232 connections are in common use for commercial and custom home systems. There are both audio, video, and controllers that are RS-232. Crestron makes quite a nice control system. Also expensive.

  • Imagine arraying 9 of these together with a video processor. All controlled via Crestron (232).... Did it. The on-board edge blending capability works pretty good and the color adjustments in the menu let you color match multiple projector arrays quite well.

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