BenQ TH585 1080p Gaming Projector, Low Input Lag for Gaming, 3500 Lumens High Brightness, Built-in 10W Speaker

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BenQ TH585 1080p Gaming Projector, Low Input Lag for Gaming, 3500 Lumens High Brightness, Built-in 10W Speaker

BenQ TH585 1080p Gaming Projector, Low Input Lag for Gaming, 3500 Lumens High Brightness, Built-in 10W Speaker

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
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Besides, you get the support of a 3.5mm stereo port. However, I suggest you connect your soundbar using HDMI. The placement & Mount: BenQ TH585

Based on the Society for Movie and Television Engineers (SMPTE) recommendations, the TH585P's 3,500-lumen rating should be enough to light up a 270-inch, 1.0-gain, 16:9 screen in a dark room, or a 150-inch screen in moderate ambient light. In my tests, even the lower-brightness Game mode delivered a suitably bright image to light up a 90-inch screen in a family room at night with lights on, and remain watchable—though a little washed out—using an 80-inch screen on a sunny afternoon in a room with lots of windows.

Though, when you stare at the projector for the first time, you’ll get to know that it is designed for home entertainment—watching media content and gaming. Moreover, you can use it in daylight or in rooms with ambient lights. What else you get at a reasonable price? Somewhat surprisingly for a gaming projector, the TH585P delivers underwhelmingly low volume, both in absolute terms and for its 10-watt speaker. The audio system is suitable for a small room, but for larger rooms, or even in a small room if you want an immersive audio experience, you'll need to connect an external sound system to the audio-out port. As with the BenQ HT2150ST, the TH585 offers only one 3D picture mode and works with DLP-link glasses only. I saw no crosstalk in my tests and only minor 3D-related motion artifacts.

Setting the projector to its Game picture mode (with Fast Mode on), I measured the input lag with my Leo Bodnar meter. With the resolution at 1080p, and 60Hz input, the figure came in at 16.4 milliseconds. Along with the fast lag time, the TH585 offers a small chassis and light weight, which is important to gamers who want a projector they can easily move from room to room, bring to a friend's house, or store away when not using it. However, BenQ doesn't include a carrying case in the price. Since 1982, PCMag has tested and rated thousands of products to help you make better buying decisions. See how we test. It comes with a 10W-speaker, a mono speaker, that reaches up to 70dB. Thus, it is okay for normal usage. However, for home entertainment, you’ll definitely need an external sound system. For the suggestion, go for atleast a 2.1 soundbar. I set up the projector for a 90-inch image at 10.5 feet from the screen. Image quality with default settings is excellent for the price and more than acceptable by most folks' standards. Image detail is appropriate for the 1080p resolution, and colors are well within the range for realistic color in most picture modes.The rated 3,500 lumens is bright enough, according to Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) recommendations, for a 270-inch-diagonal, 16:9 image using a 1.0-gain screen in a dark room, or for a 150-inch image in moderately bright ambient light. As with almost any projector, however, the modes you'll actually want to use have significantly lower brightness. Furthermore, unlike most projectors, the TH585 has a six-segment color wheel, RGBWYC—red-green-blue-white-yellow-cyan, resulting in brighter and vibrant picture quality. The BenQ TH585 is your best home theater projector under 500 in 2023. If gaming and watching movies is in your mind, you can’t find any better projector in this price range. Let’s start with the fact that it’s a full HD projector (1920x1080p) equipped with 3500 ANSI lumens of brightness. Instead of focusing on 4K resolution, BenQ has worked on large-screen projection—a primary factor for a majority of the people who want to enjoy their family time on a big screen. Brightness:What does it offer?

An unusual extra at this price is support for digital vertical lens shifting. This feature takes advantage of the extra pixels on the 1,920-by-1,200 chip to let you move the image up or down from its centered position by about 5 percent of the image height. Along with the 1.1x zoom, it allows for some flexibility in positioning the projector. In addition, if you still need to tilt the projector up or down to point at the screen after adjusting the shift, a +/- 30 degree vertical keystone control allows for squaring off the image. Assessing the Color Even though these are two expensive alternatives (GT1080HDR and HD39HDR), the BenQ TH585 has a lot to offer for the price tag it carries. My Take On BenQ TH585: The Conclusion The rated 3,500 lumens is bright enough, according to Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) recommendations, for a 270-inch-diagonal, 16:9 image using a 1.0-gain screen in a dark room, or for a 150-inch image in moderately bright ambient light. As with almost any projector, however, the modes you'll actually to use have significantly lower brightness.Since the projector offers high brightness and contrast, you’ll enjoy your favorite content even in the ambient lights. Moreover, The BenQ TH585 is a sister model to BenQ HT21050ST and is primarily designed for home theater setup with ambient lights. The white segment, meanwhile, lets the TH585 deliver a brighter image than you would get from an otherwise identical projector without one, contributing a lot to the projector's rating of 3,500 ANSI lumens. However, note that this inclusion affects color accuracy, which is why color wheels in projectors meant for traditional home theater in a dark room—take the BenQ HT2150ST, for example—don't include white panels. Cinema mode offers the best color accuracy and does the best job holding the subtle gradations that give closeups of rounded objects a sense of three-dimensionality. But the slightly brighter Living Room mode is not far behind, and Game mode is close behind that, albeit with slightly less saturated color. So overall, I declare, for the price, that BenQ TH585 is an attractive and robust entry-level home theater projector for gaming and watching content. Pros & Cons: What I like: If you're looking for a projector for gaming and for watching movies and TV in rooms with ambient light, be sure to consider a step up in price from the BenQ TH585 and include the Optoma GT1080HDR and Optoma HD39HDR on your comparison list. Both are also designed for gaming and offer higher rated brightness, among other features, for the higher price. If you're more interested in watching movies and TV in a dim or dark room, but still want the fast lag time needed for gaming, be sure to take a look at the BenQ HT2150ST, a more expensive model that isn't as bright as the TH585 but offers better color accuracy and a more robust sound system.

The model TH585 is a mid-range Full HD home theater projector of BenQ. With a price tag of under 500, the BenQTH585 has a broad range of features to offer. Compared to other same range projectors, the TH585 wins the race of home theater category for the money we put in.On 2023’s home theater projectors’ comparison list, you’ll find these two projectors as well. Like BenQ TH585 and HT2150ST, the Optoma GT1080HDR and HD39HDR are also designed for home theater purposes—gaming and movies—but with higher brightness, contrast, and of course, higher prices. Since most projector comes with a three-color-segment, they can’t produce enough bright image. On the other hand, pairing the DLP chip with a yellow segment, The TH585 has the advantage of producing more vibrant yellow than the ones with a three-segment. Whether your focus is on gaming, watching movies and video in a room with ambient light, or equally on both, the TH585P is worth a look. But be sure to consider whether your budget can stretch a bit to consider other options. The BenQ TH685P, for example, can accept 4K HDR input, takes good advantage of HDR, and shows fewer rainbow artifacts for only a little higher price. The Xgimi Horizon offers far more robust audio at the cost of an only slightly longer input lag. And if you consider rainbow artifacts unacceptably irksome, the Epson Home Cinema 2250 is guaranteed to not show any, though its input lag is more appropriate for casual—rather than serious—gaming.



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