Great review. It’s nice to know this technology is out there if you can afford it. The 132” ALR screen looks huge and the colors are vivid. Seems as though your demographic doesn’t appreciate the time and effort you make to show an alternative to the boring flat screens that have been out for 30 years. Your following shouldn’t wine about the price it’s well worth it. If you can’t afford it then it’s not for you, no reason to make derogatory comments. Look at the picture on the screen it’s huge, 4K, Cinamatic and gives you an immersive experience. Save the LEDs for your bedrooms.
Have you experienced light bleed/haloing with ust projectors? Ive seen a couple posts and videos about the problem, but it generally isnt ever mentioned. Why is this the case? Have they setup their projectors and or screens poorly? Also, does the throw ratio of some projectors induce this unwanted effect more than other projectors?
It does leave an impression no doubt. For multi seated home cinema room is perfect. I’m personally an oled guy and 83” is what I’m craving for - seated 8-9 feet from it will give me similarly amazing impression
Looks great but 6k for a screen and projector is very expensive. Especially when they're are 100 inch panels available at a fraction of the price, would have liked the review to factor in the competition, but good to know this type of thing exists
100" is a world away from 132" - he mentions this. I don't think you appreciate the difference. 100" is not "competition" - it's something else entirely, and yes, a lot more affordable for that reason.
This is a bit tangental, and I apologise for it, but just wondering if you or any subscribers happen to know where I could find a reasonably priced 80" fixed frame screen for my DLP projector? I can't seem to find anything under 100" and I literally don't have a wall with space suitable for it, but I'm getting fed up of the wavies on my hanging screens! (Incidentally, a feature vid on things like different setups at different budget levels could be cool? 😁)
@@spudo133 it's down to room shape/size. Don't have the floor space/layout for a big TV, and as it's a rental I'm not allowed to properly wall mount a TV, hence why I went with the projector (which is a decent one - a Horizon Pro) in the first place.
Does anyone happen to know how does this compare to the big boy lineups of Sony xw6000es or Jvc NZ series? Are the black levels so much worse on this one?
This one is better is has 3500 peak Lumens true Tri color lasers, black level enhancement (laser dimming) a F2.0 Ricoh lens and sits inches away from the screen not 10 to 20 feet.
All you do is talk in all your videos, but you don't show any numbers about real iso-lumens or calibration settings. This is just a commercial RU-vid channel, just like the other 1000 commercial blah blah blah channels on RU-vid. Customers deserve honest reviews based on real facts and figures, not because the manufacturer pays you for it.
This changes NOTHING! Buy a TV! Do NOT buy a projector and screen. The set up is NOT easy. They are NOT bright at all. You won't want to watch during the day. It also feels weird when u are watching a TV show like Modern family, Seinfeld, or whatever, all of that content wasn't designed for a huge projector.
You are so wrong, it is bright and vivid as we can all tell from the video and SD is just as brilliant. This troll posts the same thing on all UST reviews. Keep the tiny reflective LEDs for your bedrooms but get a UST Laser Projector to turn one room into an immersive cinematic experience. Trust me you’ll never go back to enjoying LED’s.
@@jaychannel8558 I owned a Samsung UST projector and 120" ALR screen. Call me whatever u want. I had to sell mine for next to nothing. U can't tell if the picture is bright and vivid from a RU-vid video. U need to see it in real life.
@@michael-4k4000I have the AWOL LTV 3500, it is this spectacular. Samsungs are horrible UST’s they rank last in every category. Night and day, literally.
I'd also mention how much less power this projector uses in comparison to 100"+ TV. We are talking massive power draw in terms of the new mled TCL 115...
@LuckTR I can't speak to that. But that makes sense. Then again, you aren't watching a 100" screen all day. Usually, screens of that size are used for movie's or special shows, or big games. I owed a Samsung top of the line UST projector and a VAVA 120" alr screen. What NO one is telling u is the projector needs to be very low, I had to find a 7" stand for the projector, it was not designed for it and it didn't look good. These UST projector systems are not easy to set up, and you will never get it to fill the screen perfectly, there is always some light spillage and the lines are never perfectly straight. As the screen is essentially on the floor, it's very easy for it to get bumped into and then have to realign the projector. Again, it does not get that bright, any TV would get much brighter, have more contrast, better processing, etc. If u must buy one, make sure u know the return policy so you have the option to return. A 98" tv makes so much more sense, and they get to close to 5,000 nits. Remember ALR screens have a Gain of .6, that means you lose 40% of the light output, but u get better contrast in the daytime. Even if u got 100% of the light output of your projector, it's still only around 100 nits. If u are in a completely light controlled room this would be OK as your eyes would adjust, but it's still not bright. Buy at your own risk.....