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Epson EH-TW550 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £568
inc VAT

Great 2D picture quality for a 720p projector, but its 3D support just isn’t good enough at this price

Specifications

1,280×720 resolution, 3,000 ANSI lumens, 77x325x243mm, 2.6kg

http://www.ebuyer.com

Trying to cement its aim to be a great all-round occasional-use projector, the Epson EH-TW550 3-LCD projector has a low price, a 720p (1,280×1,080) resolution, and a bright 3,000 ANSI lumens bulb, so you can use it in most situations.

It’s very compact, so you’ll have no problem setting it up on your coffee table. There’s no lens shift and the projector has automatic keystone correction turned on by default. As this is a digital correction, it’s best to turn it off and line-up the projector with the screen. This should be easy enough as the EH-TW550 has two height-adjustable feet at the back and a height-adjustable kickstand at the front to help aim the image higher or lower depending on your A/V set-up.

Epson EH-TW550

There’s just one HDMI and VGA input, as well as older S-video and composite inputs. There are also two USB ports. The Type B port lets you connect a laptop computer and send its video and audio over USB; however, this feature’s more useful in the office. The USB Type A port lets you stream pictures from a connected mass storage device.

For video, there are four preset colour modes for 2D (Dynamic, Living Room, Cinema and Game) and two for 3D content (3D Dynamic and 3D Cinema), and all of them can be customised using the brightness, contrast, colour saturation, tint, sharpness, colour temperature and individual colour settings in the menu.

Epson EH-TW550

In our testing, we found that Living Room produced the best colours and the deepest blacks, but we couldn’t see a huge amount of detail in darker night scenes. Game mode rectified this to a certain extent, but its increased brightness made colours look a little washed out by comparison, and blacks were virtually grey. Cinema, on the other hand, was very orange and warm, and we’d recommend staying away from Dynamic, as colours looked far too green and oversaturated in this mode on its default settings. Despite these issues, we were able to find a good balance between colour vibrancy and good contrast using its in-depth menu settings.

Our test footage looked good, but it struggled slightly with fast camera pans and particularly intense action sequences. Images became a bit juddery during these scenes, but on the whole we were very pleased with what we saw. There are also options to reduce the amount of noise on screen, power consumption and aspect ratio.

It also supports 3D, but you’ll have to buy Epson’s ELPGS03 active shutter glasses separately (£68 from www.ebuyer.com) as none are included in the box. We were disappointed that our pair of test glasses dimmed the brightness so much, but this wasn’t helped by either the 3D Dynamic or 3D Cinema colour modes. 3D Dynamic produced by far the brightest and most vivid colours, but 3D Cinema was almost too dark to see, and increasing the brightness simply made the image appear very white and even more washed out. Its 3D menu does have a brightness setting, but the difference between Low and High was almost negligible.

Epson EH-TW550

It’s a shame, as its 3,000 ANSI lumen lamp gave us high hopes for a slightly brighter 3D experience, particularly at this price range, but sadly we didn’t see any benefit here compared with other budget 3D projectors with dimmer lamps. That said, we didn’t encounter any ghosting or crosstalk at all, so even if the colours aren’t brilliant, you can at least count on a smooth and trouble-free 3D viewing experience.

Running costs are reasonable, with the lamp rated to last 4,000 hours at full brightness and 5,000 hours in ECO mode. This equates to running costs for around 4p and 3p per hour respectively.

The EH-TW550 has integrated 2W speakers, but they’re not very loud and they produced very tinny sounds with almost no bass, so we’d recommend connecting up to a pair of surround sound speakers for watching films and playing games.

The Epson EH-TW550 is a decent 720p projector, but its 3D support just isn’t quite good enough to recommend it over the non-3D Epson EH-TW480. Moreover, spend a little more and you can get a decent 1080p projector. You get better value with the 1080p BenQ W1070, but if you want to keep costs to a minimum, then the EH-TW480 is the better choice.

Details

Price £568
Details www.epson.co.uk
Rating ***

Specifications

Projector technology 3-LCD
Lamp brightness 3,000 ANSI lumens
Lamp life 4,000
Lamp life in economy mode 5,000
Contrast ratio 5,000:1

Picture

Native resolution 1,280×720
Max compressed resolution 1,600×1,200
Aspect ratio 16:9
Other aspect ratios full, zoom, native
Max diagonal at 7ft 62in
Throw ratio 1.3:1 to 1.56:1
Optical zoom 1.2x
Projection distance 0.9m to 9m
Mirror image yes
Invert image yes
Lens shift horizontal 0%
Lens shift vertical 0%
HD Ready yes
Special view modes dynamic, cinema, game, living room, 3D dynamic, 3D cinema

Inputs/Outputs

VGA input yes
DVI input No
Sound inputs 1x RCA
Composite input yes
S-video input yes
HDMI input yes
Component input no
PAL support yes
SECAM support yes
NTSC support yes
Audio output 3.5mm
Video output none
Others inputs/outputs USB mass storage port, USB service port

Other

Noise (in normal use) 36dB(A)
Size 77x325x243mm
Weight 2.6kg
Internal speakers yes (2W stereo)
Extras remote, power cable, carry case
Remote special features aspect ratio, colour mode, input select, freeze, zoom, mouse control
Power consumption standby 1W
Power consumption on 311W

Lamp

Lamp cost (inc VAT) £149
Lamp supplier www.projectorpoint.co.uk
Lamp cost per hour of use £0.04
Lamp cost per hour of use (economy) £0.03

Buying Information

Price £568
Supplier http://www.ebuyer.com
Details www.epson.co.uk

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