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Classroom Projector Report 2013: Best School Projectors for Education

Posted on May 7, 2013 by Art Feierman
The 2013 Classroom Projector Report is sponsored by: Click Here! 

The 2013 Classroom Projector Report is sponsored by: Click Here! 

Classroom and Education Projectors - Overview

Some projectors really are designed primarily with school usage in mind.  While our attention is primarily on use in K-12 classrooms and multi-purpose rooms, we also consider projectors better able to handle the much larger classrooms found at todays public and private universities and colleges.   Three of these projectors are easily bright enough for small auditorium work, or classrooms up to 400 students!  This year, we've have several few small portables that are very light and suitable for moving from classroom to classroom, school to school, and we've even included on very interesting Pocket projector, which can run on a battery pack and sports reasonable brightness.  Teaching where electricity isn't guaranteed?  Finally a multi-hundred lumen pocket projector that runs on batteries.

Most projectors considered here are projectors we have reviewed, and are the traditional smallish fixed install projectors that are well designed for mounting in the classroom (or conference room).  Most are 3D ready/capable projectors, that only need you to buy 3D glasses, , and a few are interactive projectors worthy of your consideration.

Our goal is not to attempt to identify the absolute best classroom projector out of some 500+ active projectors on the market. Perhaps 1/2 of those 500 are at least somewhat suitable for school use.

Rather, our goal is to sample a wide range of projectors with varying capabilities and prices, so that teachers, business people, IT, AV managers, and, tech coordinators, etc., have a good basis for deciding what types of feature/benefits, what price points, what networking (if any) is needed.

There are far too many projectors available for there to be a single best projector that's best for most school environments, but our hope is that between the fifteen reviews, and this summary, we will help you quickly narrow the choices, and make better decisions.

As happens every year, some manufacturers invited to provide a projector decided to pass because of the timing.  We require that the projectors we consider for this report, be current models through the end of the summer when schools buy and install them.  Some new models just don't hit the market in time, with the projectors they replace are discontinued before buying season is over.  We are a little late on this year's report, due to two brand new projectors models in this report hitting the US later than originally promised, arriving two weeks or so after our official "deadline."

Several of this year's projectors are truly remarkable, and may very well represent the absolute best or most capable on the market for many users.  It's not just coincidence, as I am always looking for breakthrough projectors in both features, performance and value! Afterall there are hundreds of potential projectors to consider.  Obviously, you have to figure that there are plenty of other good projectors we don't get to.   That's OK, the trick is to find projectors that serve your needs well, and that we should be able to help you with.  There might be 10 projectors on the market that really will work great for you.  Hopefully, we'll point out one or two of the ones that work the best.

As always, our annual Best In Classroom awards will be given out to the best (and most interesting) of the reviewed projectors.

Right, annotating with the interactive Epson Brightlink 436Wi projector

We'd tried to pack a lot of information and guidance in here. Many of you are experts in your own right, but not all of our readers of this report are.  Therefore for you experts, please forgive our repetitiveness of some basic points.

Click Image to Enlarge

We recommend that our visitors read (or take a quick look, at least) the Guide to the Report. Also helpful is the Special Features page. That Special Features page provides our take on more than a dozen features and benefits found in various of these projectors, and try to put them all in perspective. Finally if you click (or use the outline), it will launch our Features and Specs Chart for this year's reviewed projectors. It will launch in a separate window so you can quickly reference it when you want. You can sort the specs and features by any column, and for that matter, can sort two or more columns. Have fun with that!

Our goal was never to identify a single absolute best projector out there. First of all, it would be a herculean task. There's no publisher in the industry that could begin to pull that off. There are at least 500 projectors sold (in the US) for business or education use, by some 50 brands. Of those, perhaps 10 or 15 percent are extremely high power, or specialty projectors, that K-12 can live without, but most of the rest are likely very useable in schools. For perhaps half of those, the K-12 market was a definite focus in the design of the projector. All that math suggests there's at least three hundred projectors currently available for K-12 school use and 2/3rds of them were likely designed with education use as the primary goal (it is the largest single projector market).

Use our awards as guides to the projectors that impressed us the most, and therefore help you understand, at least, what (we think) a best projector looks like. Ultimately you want to find the one that best meets your needs. Often our biggest benefit is to occasionally point out something that you may not have considered.

Keep in mind that for every projector we review, the manufacturer typically makes anywhere from 2 to 7 additional very similar projectors.  They might share the same case, the same general feature set, but have different resolutions, perhaps different brightness, some might have networking (wired or wireless), and prices can vary hundreds of dollars in some cases.

Two years back when we reviewed a Casio, they had eight similar projectors in one series. I'm talking the same series as the reviewed XJ-A140. In Casio's case, it broke out like this:

Four lower power projectors - 2000 lumens, and four that are otherwise the same, but 2500 lumens
Four projectors are widescreen, four XGA (yes, two of each are 2000 lumen, two are 2500 lumen)
Four projectors have USB and wireless presenting, four do not. OK, you get the idea: If you read about a projector here that sounds almost perfect, but it is the wrong resolution or aspect ratio, or it lacks networking you want, or it has networking you don't need, despair not, as there probably is a version that the manufacturer makes, that has the combination of the features you are looking for.

Enough, let's get the projectors considered in this report.

The Mitsubishi WD390U Cloud Projector projecting off of a MacBook laptop (left), hanging off of a server (that just as easily could be a cloud server).  In this case, the presentation is being controlled by the iPad mini being held at the bottom center of the image.

Click Image to Enlarge

Education Projectors Reviewed

Listed alphabetically, for your convenience, are each of the projectors considered in this year's report. You will find links to 1) short "Projector Highlights" overviews of each projector (written specifically for this report), 2) the full review of each projector, 3) each projector in our website specifications database and 4) each projector's .PDF specifications sheet.

The goal of each "Projector Highlights" overview (see first column) is to point out important aspects of each projector considered for this review. Once again, they are ordered aphabetically so as not favor any brand, and make it easier on you, our readers.  This year we included one Pocket projector, and also several other somewhat larger but still very light projectors.  These are not for your everyday teacher, or classroom, but there are many highly mobile educators out there, often specialists.  And there are those who might even need a projector for use where electricity is not guaranteed!  For that situation...well, that's why we have one battery powered pocket projector reviewed/considered for this report.

Projector Projector Image Highlights
Overview
Full Review Specs Page
BenQ MS517 benq-ms517 Click here Click here Click here
Canon WX6000 Canon-wux4000 Click here Click here Click here
Casio XJ-H2650 casio-h2650 Click here Click here Click here
Epson BrightLink 436Wi brightlink_436wi_persp Click here Click here Click here
Epson W16SK epson-w16sk Click here Click here Click here
HB Opto HBP503D hbopto-hbp503d Click here Click here Click here
InFocus IN114 infocus-in114 Click here Click here Click here
Mitsubishi WD390U-EST mitsubishi-xd360uest Click here Click here Click here
Mitsubishi WL7200 mitsubishi-wl7200u Click here Click here Click here
NEC NP-M311X nec-m260x Click here Click here Click here
NEC VE281X nec-ve281 Click here Click here Click here
Optoma TW610STi+ optoma-tw610sti Click here Click here Click here
Panasonic PT-DZ770UL panasonic-dz770ulk Click here Click here Click here
ViewSonic PJD5533w view-pjd5533w Click here Click here Click here
ViewSonic PJD6383s view-pjd6383s Click here Click here Click here

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