We are seduced by Sim2’s 3-chip DLP projector – the SIM2 C3X Lite. It’s 25 grand, but it’s worth every cent…
SIM2 C3X Lite 3-Chip DLP Projector |$24 999 | | www.audioproducts.com.au
For: Detail; dynamic colour rendition; great design
Against: Not the smoothest user interface, ruthless with poor source material
Verdict: An excellent product from the “Ferrari” of projector manufacturers
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However, 3-chip DLP projectors give fine pictures with excellent colour reproduction and complete freedom from the rainbow effect – but at a price. All credit, then, to SIM2 – which has released a 3-chip DLP projector with a price tag of $24 999. Still not cheap, but a viable proposition for the serious enthusiast.
Grand designs
SIM2’s Grand Cinema C3X ‘Lite’ is the entry-level model of this new ‘budget’ 3-chip range. All are based around a trio of HD2+ DMDs, enhanced by Dark Chip 3 (DC3) for improved blacks. The native resolution of these chips is 1280 x 720, making the C3X models ready for HD TV. At the top of the range is the C3X Link, which employs a separate video processor linked to the projector via an optical cable.
The standard C3X claims a higher contrast ratio than the C3X Lite, thanks to a more powerful lamp and refined optical path, but in other respects is identical. With its elegant curves and glossy finish, the Lite is up to SIM2’s usual high standard. It’s also smaller than other DLP 3-chips, occupying much the same volume as a standard single-chip unit. SIM2 reputedly spent $5 million developing the C3X range, a proportion of which went into designing the advanced thermal management needed to achieve this. The Lite certainly runs cool and quietly – the lack of a colour wheel and 150W projection bulb help here.
A serious projector demands serious optics, and the C3X doesn’t disappoint. There’s a choice of two lenses, both of which are custom made for SIM2 in Japan. When you order the projector, you can specify throw ratios of 2.0-3.0:1 (long-throw lens, standard) or 1.5-2.0:1 (short throw lens, special order).
Interestingly, there’s no iris control – used by some manufacturers to improve black performance at the expense of brightness. The reason for its exclusion, according to SIM2’s UK boss Alan Roser, is that the use of irises also adversely affects image ‘depth’. There is, however, a low-power ‘eco-mode’ that will improve black levels in darkened rooms.
Features
An odd fixture is an optical digital output, which contains any digital audio that happens to be present on the HDMI input. I’m not exactly sure who will use this, but it is apparently a condition of the HDMI licence! There are also two 12-volt triggers for operating peripherals like screens, plus RS232 and USB ports for remote control and firmware upgrades.
Configuration menus are comprehensive and sensibly organised. Initial setup functions include orientation (rear-/front-projection and ceiling mounting are catered for), keystone correction (digital rather than optical), lens-shift, focus and zoom.
A series of onboard test patterns are provided for initial calibration, although professional installers will no doubt prefer to use their own signal sources. The Lite makes careful provision for alignment of colour-temperature and gamma-curve. As a result, installers can calibrate this projector to ISF standards for the most accurate results.
More familiar parameters such as brightness, contrast, sharpness, tint (NTSC), noise reduction, flesh-tone correction, deinterlacing mode and colour saturation can be memorized for each input.
There are a total of eight aspect ratios to choose from, three of which are user-definable with control over width/height. Presets include 4:3, 16:9 anamorphic, letterbox expansion and ‘pixel-to-pixel’ (i.e. no scaling).
Awesome performance
The Lite gives some of the best pictures we’ve yet seen from a DLP projector. The 3-chip approach, plus SIM2’s careful optical design, results in reference standard visuals. The TI chippery that drives the DMDs may be 8-bit, yet there’s no ‘haloing’ – just a visual palette that stuns with its true-to lifeness. No convergence errors were noted, and so the three DMDs are clearly aligned to near-perfection.
Both DVDs and HD material demonstrate superb resolution, with fine textures standing out, especially if an HDMI (or, to a slightly lesser extent, component) feed is used. It was easy to discriminate between foreground and background details, such is the depth of the image. 60Hz material also proves that the onboard Faroudja DCDi deinterlacer does a fair job with pull-down correction, but some off-board scalers can fare better in this respect.
Predictably, the Lite tends to exacerbate the limitations of poor quality material like low-bitrate digital TV (it’s amazing what passes for ‘broadcast quality’ nowadays). Colours and dynamics may still impress, but movement disappears into a blur of macroblocking and edge fizz. ‘Filter’ and ‘noise reduction’ options in the menu settings can reduce, but not eliminate, such visual nasties. Given that digital TV is here to stay, SIM2 should consider implementing some kind of block noise reduction system similar to that found in Sony products. Otherwise, you’ll have to rely on an external processor to remove the worst of these anomalies.
Conclusion
Overall, this is a truly excellent product from the ‘Ferrari’ of projector manufacturers. In performance terms, it sits up there with the best of the high end breeds but has a far smaller form factor. Track down a demo today.
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