- Μηνύματα
- 42.414
- Reaction score
- 74.725
https://www.soundandvision.com/content/sony-vpl-vw295es-reviewed—part-1
Ο νέος μικρός Sony διορθώνει όλα τα προβλήματα του περσινού VW260 των 5.000€.
18Gbps, MotionFlow στο 4K, δυνατότητα αναμορφικού χωρίς όμως μνήμες για zoom όταν δεν υπάρχει. Το σασί μεγάλωσε λίγο για να χωρέσουν τα ελεκτρονικά.
The features on the VW295 are nearly identical to its predecessor, though not entirely. Perhaps the most significant upgrade is full compatibility with 18Gbps material, enabling full-quality playback of 4K/60Hz/10-bit/4:2:0 HDR sources. (It can also accept a 12-bit source, but all internal processing is done at a maximum of 10-bits.) Such sources are still quite rare (the only Ultra HD Blu-ray offering all of this, then and even now, is Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk), and are likely to remain so for some time due to their bandwidth demands. But the inability of the VW285 to operate at this rate (it was limited to 13.5Gbps) set that model up for significant criticism from potential buyers concerned about future proofing. Seeking out future proofing may be a fools-errand in today’s fast-moving tech world, but it can still be a deal-maker (or deal-killer) among I-want-it-all—now buyers.
Other changes include Motionflow that now operates in 4K (likely of limited interest to movie fans who abhor the soap-opera effect), HDR options that fall “closer to the director’s intentions” (in Sony’s words), enhanced reality creation, 4K input lag reduction useful to gamers (this had been limited to 2K in the VPL285), and a 4K-capable vertical stretch mode for use with an anamorphic lens. Sony claims improved contrast as well.
Ο νέος μικρός Sony διορθώνει όλα τα προβλήματα του περσινού VW260 των 5.000€.
18Gbps, MotionFlow στο 4K, δυνατότητα αναμορφικού χωρίς όμως μνήμες για zoom όταν δεν υπάρχει. Το σασί μεγάλωσε λίγο για να χωρέσουν τα ελεκτρονικά.