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2006-11-19 04:06:25 · 3 answers · asked by xboxx 2 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

3 answers

Many data projectors have limited resolution, designed for VGA or SVGA standards. If you are willing to live with that, check the projector specs to make sure it will accept one of the ATSC formats as input (480i/60Hz, 480p/60Hz, 720p/60Hz or 1080i/60Hz). If it was designed primarly for computer display, it may not accept these, but many do. Unless the projector will display at least 1280x760 pixels, your home theater will not be high definition.

2006-11-19 13:10:06 · answer #1 · answered by gp4rts 7 · 0 0

Yep. Now, it may not do deep blacks as well as a projector designed especially for home theater, but a screen with a grey tint can help there. And you may get better results using a PC as a DVD player, since the video output can be tweaked to exactly match the projector's native pixel resolution. Check out Avsforum.com for everything you could possibly want to know about projectors and home theater PCs.

2006-11-19 23:19:21 · answer #2 · answered by Wombat 4 · 0 0

ya of course what an idea

2006-11-19 12:07:47 · answer #3 · answered by yamnona 2 · 0 0

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