JVC DLA-RS10 - Performance
2/3/2009 - Art Feierman
|
|
JVC DLA-RS10 Brightness
The RS10 is very bright in its best mode, brighter than most 1080p projectors out there. In it's brightest mode, however, it is just slightly brighter still, hardly enough to notice. That makes it just on the low side of average brightness for "brightest" mode, when you have to deal with some ambient light. In fact, the provided THX mode is only a few dozen lumens dimmer than brightest mode (Dynamic). All these measurements assume lamp on full power (High setting), unless otherwise noted.
DLA-RS10 Projector - Uncalibrated:
Cinema 1 ("best" mode) : 710 lumens
Note, after our calibration, brightness actually increased slightly to 740 lumens.
Cinema 2: 629 lumens
(low color temp optimized for black and white movies)
Natural: 707 lumens
Stage: 717 lumens
Dynamic: 814 lumens
Interestingly, most of those numbers are a few lumens less than our RS20 measured. This could be lamp variation as the RS10 is officially supposed to be 1000 lumens, vs. the RS20's 900 lumens. More likely though, when calibrating one or both JVC's were not quite at the zoom mid-point (there is no defined "stop" to indicate the center of the range). The wide/tele measurements below would tend to support that, as the RS10 shows brighter in wide angle than the RS20, but dimmer for the other two settings.
Note that Cinema 1 and 2 are reversed between the two projectors. Cinema 1 on the RS10 ("best" mode) is the equivalent to Cinema 2 on the RS20, and vice versa. I have no idea as to why they switched those two around, but they did.
The Effect of zoom lens positioning on brightness: Our standard measurements reported are done with the zoom at its mid-point. Here are relative numbers from the Cinema 1mode, for different lens positioning:
Zoom out (closest position - wide-angle): 880 lumens
Mid-zoom: 710 lumens
Zoom in: 578 lumens
Thus at the maximum zoom distance, the lumens are 18% lower. At the closest distance (wide angle), they are 15% greater. (The same ratios should apply to any preset mode)
Low lamp power ("Normal" lamp mode), for Cinema 1: 481 lumens
High lamp power ("High" lamp mode) for Cinema 1: 710 lumens
That works out to a drop of 32% less brightness when running the lamp in Normal (low) mode. That same percentage difference should be unchanged, regardless of preset mode.
Sharpness
The JVC's have never been among the very sharpest looking 1080p projectors around, none the less, it's not an area of concern. I refer to the JVC projectors as having average sharpness, simply because they do look sharp. Any differences on movie viewing between the RS20, and the sharpest projectors out there is slight. You will likely notice more difference with a straight digital video signal (much of the HDTV content), as you don't have the softening effects of the film, that comes with movies.
Perhaps this average "sharpness" is due to JVC's use of LCoS panels which have the least visible pixel structure. That may inherently make them look a little softer, even as they reveal the same amount of detail. That wouldn't surprise me, as the Sony's are typically similar to the JVC's and they too are LCoS. The other major projector that tends to fit in the group (in terms of sharpness) is the Panasonic PT-AE3000 which uses their SmoothScreen Technology on their LCD panels to end up with a pixel structure no more visible than LCoS.
I don't notice any huge differences between the RS10 and the sharpest 1080p projector I have here the InFocus IN83. when watching movies, but I can definitely spot a little softening on my HDTV sports viewing. Side by side you, though, you can immediately see that the IN83 is sharper. The JVC does have a nice sharpness control and a detail enhancement one as well, on the advanced Picture menu. You can dial them up quite a bit, and get more sharpness, but if too far, you'll start getting some sharpening artifacts. The RS10 sharpness images taken below were the default sharpness settings. Dialed up, the sharpness and detail enhancement bring the JVC closer still, to the IN83.
One thing noteworthy about the RS10's sharpness, is that it seems more consistent than many other 1080p projectors from the center of the screen to the corners. Many projectors have very detectable softening of the image in the corners and outside area, if you focus from the dead center. We recommend that with any projector you should pick a spot for dead on focus, that is about 1/3 of the way from the center to the corner. That will give the best overall sharpness across the image.
For your consideration, our usual close up images
Top left: JVC DLA-RS10, Top Left Center - Sanyo PLV-Z3000, Top Right Center - Sony VPL-VW60, Top right - Mitsubishi HC7000
2nd row left: Epson Home Cinema 6500UB, left center: Panasonic PT-AE3000, right center: Optoma HD8000, right: InFocus IN83
Close up of a computer monitor, from Space Cowboys (Blu-ray), left to right DLA-RS10, Epson Home Cinema 6500UB, Panasonic PT-AE3000, and BenQ W20000.
JVC DLA-RS10: Bottom Line Sharpness
Overall, I don't consider sharpness to be an important factor with the vast majority of 1080p projectors. While there are slight differences between the sharpest, and the average ones, it is something that people are only likely to notice with pure digital sources, less so, with film based movies. Even there, my college football games are more than "sharp enough". If you do want to get a slightly crisper image, try the controls. One last image set, this one from The Dark Knight - lots of fine detail, not that the sequence is on the screen more than a couple of seconds. For this I have the sharpness setting turned up.
Immediately below are the same basic image on two other projectors, for comparison. The Epson Home Cinema 6500UB (left) and the Panasonic PT-AE3000 (right):
Time to move on!
Light Leakage
Seems like JVC projectors leak light all over the place, out of the lens. This is especially true if you are using a lot of vertical lens shift. That's the bad news.
The good news is that while it covers a wide area, it's so dark as to be a non-issue. I remember still being able to spot the faint light on my off-white front wall of my theater when I reviewed the RS2 last year (and more so, with my RS1), but only on very dark scenes, and if looking! With my now dark, rust colored walls, the newer RS10's light leak is invisible to my eyes in a completely darkened room.
JVC DLA-RS10 Image Noise
JVC uses higher end Silicon Optix for their image processing. They are using the Silicon Optix Reon-VX. Good stuff! The Reon-VX is found in a number of excellent projectors. I'm not aware of any notable flaws in image processing. Mosquito noise is just visible, in normal amounts, without the Noise Reduction engaged. I don't see a need to implement it, but that is personal taste. Performance on motion artifacts is very good. As you can imagine, the RS10 easily passes all the other related related tests on the HQV test disc, as that widely used test disc is put out by Silicon Optix.
DLA-RS10 Audible Noise
The new JVC RS10 is definitely quieter than my old RS1, and therefore also the RS2. It's still not the quietest projector around, but JVC is now claiming an impressive 19db in low lamp mode (Normal). It is also quieter than the older models in high lamp mode (High). It is now quieter than just about all the DLP projectors, and a bit quieter than the Epson Home and Pro Cinema series projectors (3LCD). On the other hand, it still makes more audible noise than the extremely quiet Panasonic and Mitsubishi home theater projectors.
Of course, none of that matters. What does matter, is whether it is quiet enough for your room and your sensitivity. In Normal mode, no one is going to have an issue. In High mode, a very small group of folks might, but I doubt that it will be a deal breaker for anyone. JVC lowered the audible noise enough (High mode) to take it out of the major concern category for most people who have the projector mounted almost directly overhead. If shelf mounted, it should not be an issue, as the shelf itself will absorb some of the sound eminating from the RS10. Let's put it this way - if the RS10 is still to noisy for you, then you will find that there are only a handful of projectors that can do noticeably better in this regard, and I believe all of them are of the lower cost LCD projector variety.






