

This movie while not being Citizen Kane is a great movie to show the weaknesses of an HDR monitor or projector. Meg is a movie about a prehistoric shark found in the depths of the ocean set loose on humans for nice bite size snacks. The next scene from the Kaleidescape is Meg. This was ALMOST as good as the new 8K Samsung QLED flagship TV, but not on an 85 inch screen but a giant 178 inch screen. The sharpness is again close to real 8K and details shine. The blacks are just gorgeous, and that makes the colors so delicious that you may find yourself drooling. The Kaleidescape moved on to the first key scene in Ready Player One. The soap opera effect was noticeable in certain scenes but it looked like a window to the set. We turned on motion processing to the lowest setting. JVC came to play with their new entry level laser projector. JVC is bringing PQ to the $11,000 mark that used to be held for $30K+ projectors.

They’re better than the JVC NX models in contrast. This is a great HDR film and the JVC has either the best or second best tone mapping I’ve ever come across.įirst let’s get two things out of the way: this projector is SHARP and I was watching on a 178 inch diagonal 2.39:1 Seymour Screen Excellence Neo. The opening clouds can differentiate one product from another and the JVC didn’t disappoint. It starts with Guardians of the Galaxy II and the opening scene. This is my video script meant to put video products through a good selection of demos to properly gauge the performance of the video product.

Once I had the whites perfect and the color where I felt good it was time to run my Kaleidescape script. The JVC has 2200 lumens and I shined it on a Seymour Screen Excellence Neo. Every point made in the article is about the JVC without using MadVR unless stated) combination I started diving into enjoying the projector and tweaking it as I watched more and took some color measurements. Once set up with the Kaleidescape Terra12 and Strato C as the source and a MadVR/Trinnov (MadVR Envy is used as a reference to see how well the JVC does things.

I also immediately thought “oh no, another product worthy of a Top Choice Award? What is that 5 products in a row? Readers will think I love everything!” Rest assured, I’ve just been on a good run of product. It also costs 2.5 times the amount of the RS2100. The answer is in regards to the 4100: significant. I also happened to have the JVC at the same time.Īfter set up which is about as simple a projector set up can be, the picture immediately makes you go “damn, that’s a good picture.” From there you start wondering how much better is the 31. I just finished reviewing the exceptional Epson LS12000 and it was impressive with its colors, brightness and yes contrast. It’s a 2 way shifting process unlike the 31 which have 4 way shifting and the correct pixel count for 8K. It’s got a large laser light source in it and is 4K DILA native with E-Shift technology creating a simulated 8K image. The first thing you notice is, this thing is big. Then a friend called and said “I have an RS2100 in stock do you want to review it?” JVC projectors are hard to get and they promised to get me towards the front of the list for the new RS4100/NZ9 to review.
