Sony projectors have an established reputation for providing outstanding picture quality, and the VPD-LE100 builds on this reputation. Digital Light Processing, a Texas Instruments technology, is combined with the power of Sony video technologies to bring you brilliant images.
In action, the VPD-LE100 has amazing brightness of 10,000 ANSI lumens, providing tremendous audience impact. Then there is the outstanding image quality. Colors are rich and saturated, with the superb resolution maintained right to the corners of the picture - all eyes will undoubtedly be drawn to these incredible large-screen images. Combine the flexibility offered by extensive support of HDTV and DTV signals as well as features such as vertical and horizontal lens shift, and its easy to see why the VPD-LE100 is our flagship projector.
Outstanding Brightness
The Sony VPD-LE100 projects images on to the screen with the outstanding brightness of 10,000 ANSI lumens.
Brilliant Color Reproduction
The VPD-LE100 provides highly accurate, natural color reproduction. Projected images are very clear and
natural.
- 13-bit signal processing brings a very high standard of color reproduction and an accurate brightness grayscale. Projected images have a noticeably smooth quality, which is maintained right across large screen displays.
- The Xenon lamp used in the VPD-LE100 has a flat spectrum characteristic that contributes to the optimum balance of the R, G and B elements of the input signal. This results in the same natural, rich color reproduction that is seen when using a film projector.
Precise Image Reproduction
Provides real SXGA resolution. The details of the original images are maintained, while precise and smooth images are reproduced with Sony Digital Reality Creation™ (DRC™) technology and a 2-3 pull down technique*.
- DRC generates video pictures that have a resolution that is effectively four times that of a conventional video signal. This results in the projection of high density images in which the details of the objects are enhanced.
- A 2-3 pull-down technique (similar to that used in telecine equipment) helps reproduce detailed pictures from film-originated signals.