Review Update: BenQ
PE8700
Evan Powell, July 29, 2004
ProjectorCentral.com

We first reviewed the BenQ PE8700
in September of last year. When first
released the PE8700 featured the HD2 DLP
chip. This spring, BenQ upgraded the unit to
include the newer HD2+ chip, which is the
same 1280x720 resolution, but higher in
contrast than the HD2. At that time the
contrast spec on the unit was raised from
2000:1 to 2500:1. Other than the upgraded
DLP chip there was no other technical change
made to the model. However we brought the
new version in for another look, and thus
offer this updated review.
BenQ did not change the model number to
reflect the enhanced chip. All units with
serial number 99J5877B2140300017H and higher
contain the new, higher contrast HD2+ DLP
chipset.
This model continues to be priced quite
aggressively in the marketplace. At this
writing the PE8700 is the lowest priced HD2+
projector available. Due to its remarkable
price/performance it continues to maintain
its place on our list of Highly Recommended
Home Theater Projectors.
Product Overview
Unlike most projectors from BenQ, the
PE8700 is clearly designed with home theater
as its intended market. The upgraded HD2+
DLP chip generates marginally higher
contrast than the original version, and the
rated 1000 ANSI lumen output is ample for
light-controlled home theater. The light
engine uses a 6-segment, 5x speed color
wheel. The engine is sealed to prevent light
leakage and dust contamination. And features
like picture-in-picture and
picture-on-picture make it particularly
consumer friendly. Physically it is a solid
unit weighing 16.7 lbs.
Lens and throw distance. The
PE8700 has a 1.2x manual zoom and focus lens
with a relatively short throw distance. A
100" diagonal 16:9 image is obtained from as
little as 10 feet and no more than 12 feet.
That is good news for those with limited
viewing space, and probably not so ideal for
those with larger rooms that would prefer to
mount the unit closer to the rear wall.
Lamp life. The lamp has a
2000-hour life. After 1950 hours of usage
you are warned at power up to replace the
lamp. When usage exceeds 2000 hours, the
unit will not continue to operate normally
until the lamp is replaced. There is no high
brightness or eco mode on this unit.
Connector panel. The connector
panel gives you three inputs in the "video
group" and two in the "graphic group." The
video group consists of one composite RCA,
one S-video, and one set of three component
RCAs for component interlaced input (no 480p
available on this input). The graphic group
gives you one DVI-I connector and a set of 5
BNCs for component interlaced, component
progressive, HDTV, and computer input. The
PIP and POP features let you select one
signal from each group. (Thus you may not,
for example, access the S-video input and
the 3-RCA component port via PIP
simultaneously.) The connector panel also
incorporates an RS232c port and a 12-volt
trigger.
Since you cannot feed 480p into the 3-RCA
component port, you must use the BNC port
for this signal. You can use a standard
component video cable by attaching three
RCA-to-BNC adapters to one end. These are
cheap and available at Radio Shack or any
local electronics store.
Signal compatibility. Color
systems include NTSC, NTSC 4.43, PAL-M,
PAL-N, SECAM. Signal formats include 480i,
480p, 1080i, 720p and computer inputs up to
1280x1024.
Remote control. The PE8700 has an
easy to use remote. It is well back-lit and
each button is labeled and easy to see in
the dark. Separate source input buttons
allow you to select your desire source
without having to toggle sequentially
through the options. Picture-in-picture
(PIP), and picture-on-picture (POP) are both
available on the remote, and the control
includes the ability to resize the PIP
image.
The remote also features five separate
aspect ratio format buttons that let you
select either anamorphic, standard 4:3 with
side bars, "wide 4:3" that stretches the 4:3
image to fill the 16:9 screen, letterbox,
and "through" which delivers a smaller
native format image without scaling. (By the
way, the wide 4:3 option expands the 4:3
image non-linearly along the horizontal
axis. That means the left and right portions
of the image are stretched while the center
portion of the image retains its original
aspect ratio. If you need to stretch the 4:3
image to fill the 16:9 frame, this is by far
the best way to accomplish it.)
Performance
Brightness. After calibration we
measured light output with 480p component
inputs at 420 ANSI lumens, and with 480i
component at 345 ANSI lumens. Realizing an
incrementally bright picture via progressive
scan input is typical for many digital
projectors, as is the 20% differential we
see on the PE8700.
Scaling and deinterlacing. In
general the PE8700 delivers a sharp, stable
image. Scaling and deinterlacing from the
Silicon Image SI504 chipset are relatively
clean and may be described as typical of
this class of product. We see fewer motion
artifacts when using 480p and bypassing the
internal deinterlacer. The scaling of HDTV
1080i is very good and competitive, but not
the best among the population of HD2+
products.
Geometry. We have seen some
optical distortion on other units featuring
the HD2 chips. The original unit reviewed
displayed a perfect 16:9 image with precise
90-degree corners and no optical distortion.
This unit has an extremely slight rounding
on the upper edge, but it is insignificant
compared to errors we have seen on competing
units. Overall geometry on this unit is just
about perfect.
Color accuracy is on par with many
DLP products using the 6-segment color
wheel. By that we mean that it is
substantially better than most DLP
projectors using the 4-segment wheel, but
not perfect. There are no glaring errors. We
found a subtle orange bias in the reds which
is quite common. But in general flesh tones
are natural and the projector can be
calibrated to deliver a well-balanced image.
DVI input with DVD. On the PE8700
the cleanest possible image from DVD is
derived from a DVD player or video scaler
that upscales to 720p and outputs via DVI.
This time around we tested it with the
DVDO iScan HD video processor and got
outstanding results. We would urge users of
this projector to consider adding the iScan
HD to their system. The incremental cost is
manageable for most of those budgeting in
this range for a projector, and the
incremental picture quality and audio
control that the iScan HD contributes makes
for a superb overall system.
Audible noise. This unit's fan
noise was low and comparable to many
competing HD2+ projectors.
Overscan. Most video displays
factor in a slight bit of overscan to ensure
the entire screen is filled with the image.
Ideally the edges of the image fall just
barely off the screen with minimal loss of
picture information. We found overscan
tolerances to be just fine with component
480i input, losing less than 2% on both
sides of the image. DVI input was of course
perfect with the full overscan pattern
visible and no image loss. However with
component 480p input we found the projector
was losing about 5% of the image on the
right edge. Generally there is not much
going on in this area of the picture, so the
loss is not normally noticeable. However
when there is subject matter that you know
is supposed to be centered on the screen,
such as a movie title perhaps, a 5% loss on
the right edge is enough to make the title
appear off center. We would encourage owners
of this projector to use the DVI input
anyway for best overall performance, and
with DVI overscan errors are a non-issue.
Nevertheless, for this projector the
overscan loss in 480p is one more reason to
get set up with DVI sources.
Conclusion
Currrently the BenQ PE8700 has an MSRP of
$7,995. However it is selling for street
prices below $5,000, making it clearly the
least expensive of the HD2+ projectors on
the market. At this price it continues to be
an outstanding value. |