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InFocus Play Big IN76 Projector Physical Tour

Posted on October 10, 2013 by Art Feierman

Physical Tour:

Starting, facing the front of the InFocus IN76, all there is to see, is the recessed zoom lens mounted to the right of center. On the far left is an infra-red sensor that is pretty hard to spot due to the shiney black sculpted case of the projector. If you are running it on a table, you'll also be well aware of the attached pedestal, which allows you to tilt and swivel the projector to the desired position.

The Pedestal works great, I should point out, and it is easily removable if you are going to ceiling mount the projector. I like the idea of the pedestal instead of the traditional 3 or four adjustable feet.

The lens is a zoom with an 1.3:1 zoom ratio, providing a little more placement versatility than most DLP projectors in its class, which typically have 1.2:1 zooms. The throw ratio, is best described as medium. For example, to fill a 100" diagonal screen, you can place the IN76 as close as 11 feet and as far back as about 13 fee 10 inchest. If you have a fairly deep room, you won't be able to place the projector back far enough to sit on a rear wall shelf, however it should work for most people.

Moving to the top of the projector, in the front, just back from the lens are two concentric rings. The inner ring focuses the projector, while the outer one controls your zooming the image in or out.

Also found on the top, across the back, is the control panel. It is a nice, simple panel with only 6 buttons, and laid out to navigate easily. From the rear, the left most button is power. Once to turn it on, once to turn off. Next are four keys in a diamond shape. The first is the Menu button, then come the up and down arrows, and finally on the right, the select button. InFocus does not use the usually 4 arrow key configuration (plus an Enter and back/escape button), that is most typical, however their system works pretty well after you get used to it a bit. I'm familiar with this layout from other InFocus projectors I have reviewed, and the first time I encountered it, I was perfectly comfortable with their navigation scene, long before the review was finished. I'll discuss this more in the General Performance section where I cover the IN76's remote control.

That takes us to the back of the projector where you will find all the projector's inputs. The IN76 projector is slightly better equipped than most other home theater projectors. This is due to being one of the few so far that has the ability to have two digital inputs.

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On the left side you can see a 12 volt screen trigger to control a motorized screen. Then comes the HDMi digital input, but also next to it, is InFocus'es proprietary M1 connector. InFocus has been pushing this unique connector for several years. In this configuration it can accept both a digital, or an analog signal. For those of you familiar, at first glance the M1 connector looks like a DVI connector, but it is wider, with more pins. Still, it fully supports DVI (which is essentially the same as HDMI, but does not also carry audio, like HDMI. (Since home theater projectors have no speakers, no one should care!).

Alternately, instead of a digital input, with an analog adapter, you can feed the M1 an analog computer signal, or a component video signal. So, effectively the IN76 can have two separate digital sources, or one digital, and one analog (the analog could be data, or video). In addition there are the 3 RCA jacks for a standard component video source, or for parts of the European market, all 4 RCAs make up the SCART input. And, like all projectors there are the two standard "low resolution" inputs - S-video, and composite video. To round things out, there is an RS232 serial port for command and control, and the power cord input.

This is a picture from The 5th Element by the InFocus IN76.

That pretty much covers the physical attributes. Time to take a look at the Play Big IN76's image quality.

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