SONY BRAVIA VPL-VW80
Listed under: Install
Published: Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Hot on the heels of a range of new HD projectors is Sony’s latest offering, the Bravia VPL-VW80.
Integral to its design is a triple SXRD (Silicon X-tal Reflective Display) panel array, able to run at 100fps with aid of what Sony have dubbed ‘Motionflow Dark Frame Insertion’, which works to create intermediate frames based on the video source and insert these into the footage for extra-smooth motion. At the same time, darkened frames can also be inserted to heighten contrast and reduce judder during rapid camera pans, a potential boon when viewing fast-paced action scenes and sports footage.
Other high-end features offered by the VPL-VW80 include a standard contrast ratio of 60,000:1, full 24p playback from high-def sources and support for xvYCC, the industry-approved successor to the sRGB standard. Add to that its anamorphic zoom function (requiring an optional third-party anamorphic lens) for CinemaScope applications and <20dB operating level, and the upper-end home cinema market certainly seems to be hotting up…
For further information visit: http://www.sonybiz.net
Integral to its design is a triple SXRD (Silicon X-tal Reflective Display) panel array, able to run at 100fps with aid of what Sony have dubbed ‘Motionflow Dark Frame Insertion’, which works to create intermediate frames based on the video source and insert these into the footage for extra-smooth motion. At the same time, darkened frames can also be inserted to heighten contrast and reduce judder during rapid camera pans, a potential boon when viewing fast-paced action scenes and sports footage.
Other high-end features offered by the VPL-VW80 include a standard contrast ratio of 60,000:1, full 24p playback from high-def sources and support for xvYCC, the industry-approved successor to the sRGB standard. Add to that its anamorphic zoom function (requiring an optional third-party anamorphic lens) for CinemaScope applications and <20dB operating level, and the upper-end home cinema market certainly seems to be hotting up…
For further information visit: http://www.sonybiz.net
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