Sound + Image

Make it short

Ultra-short-throw projectors are going great guns. Even mainstream companies not previously or no longer involved in projection (LG, Samsung, Hisense) have realised that a projector sitting on a bench can deliver a large-screen ‘TV-like’ experience with a convenience that a conventional projector cannot when it has to be pushed back in the room or hung on a ceiling.

As a consequence the ultra-short-throw is rapidly evolving. Since it’s going to work like a TV, shouldn’t it have speakers? Shouldn’t it be smart, like a TV? Yes it should. So here comes Epson, a company which declares itself the world no.1 in projection (on the reasonable basis it has been declared so by Futuresource Consulting for the last 17 consecutive years), with new models for just this space, the EH-LS500 (see overleaf) and this EH-LS300. With such underlying expertise, does it deliver the promised new age of UST?

Equipment

Ultra-short-throw projectors use a combination of lenses and mirrors to cast the picture up onto a screen almost immediately above them. The Epson EpiqVision EH-LS300B is a fairly compact specimen at 467mm wide and 400mm deep. Inside there are three 15.5mm LCD projector panels using Epson’s C Fine technology, and a laser diode. That kind of light engine works by firing the laser into some phosphor, which then produces a bright white light.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Sound and Image

Sound and Image1 min read
Vm: Closer To The Music
Audio-Technica recently celebrated its 60th anniversary, a longevity borne from both diversity and an ongoing history of innovation in technologies. Working out how to implant a diamond needle without crushing the tip of a pipe cantilever was key to
Sound and Image2 min read
1986 Stand By Me's Bridge Crossing
One of the most famous scenes in Rob Reiner's 1986 classic Stand by Me sees our four kid heroes - Chris (River Phoenix), Gordie (Wil Wheaton), Teddy (Corey Feldman) and Vern (Jerry O'Connell) - gingerly set out to cross a 100ft-high railway bridge th
Sound and Image5 min read
We'll Throw Away 86% Of Your Music, OK?
Every time we put together an issue of Sound+Image focused on vinyl, I plan to open it up with a comment piece extolling the joys of LP records and how much pleasure this surviving music format brings to my life. But it seems that every time, somethi

Related Books & Audiobooks