Hisense L5H 100 inch ALR screen deal!

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Hetfield

Audioholic Samurai
I have been looking to go to 100 inches since we bought a house with a very nice room for a "home theater". Was looking at a few TCL 98 inchers, Hisense TV's 100 inch but a liked the Hisense L5H 100 Laser TV too. On Thursday I saw it for a ridiculous price on the Costco website. 999.99 with free installation which is bonkers in my opinion. Its on the Hisense website for 1,000 off 2,999.99 and Costco had it for 999.99. I'm confused but happy about the deal. Is the screen easy or hard to put together? The free installation is interesting but seems its kinda hit or miss with scheduling and everything. I may try to do it myself. What do you think overall of this projector and screen? ALR screens are supposed to be awesome.
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
It's a good deal if you have a proper room to put it in. The big reason that these are selling for so cheap is that at $2,000+ they make almost no sense when the 100" TVs are now competitively priced. A TV is brighter, and is native 4K resolution. You may also find HDMI 2.1 inputs with proper 120hz support for gaming as well.

So, while I am a huge fan of front projection, Hisense locking in these projectors to only 100" diagonal image sizes is a tough sell these days. It's not a bad deal if you only have 100" to work with in your room, but in a lit room, I'd go for a TV every day of the week.
 
D

dolynick

Full Audioholic
The screen shouldn't be too bad to assemble. You just have to make sure that you get all the wrinkles out and a decently tight stretch without marking the material.

Be aware that because it's an ALR, it will have a relatively narrow viewing field where it looks best. That's the nature of ALR as they simply limit the directions of the light bounce back out into the room. This usually means that they will work better on the narrow wall of a longer/deeper room. It also means that there is going to be an orientation to the screen for a short throw from the bottom, so make sure you pay attention to any indicator for which way the screen should be mounted.
 
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BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
Be aware that because it's an ALR, it will have a relatively narrow viewing field where it looks best.
Just FYI: This is only true with the Fresnel UST screens. The more standard lenticular sawtooth design has a wide viewing angle due specifically to the flat ridged design. It isn't as bright as the Fresnel screens tend to be, but they have a much wider viewing angle.

Up/down definitely has a more narrow viewing cone, but side to side the lenticular screens are a solid choice for wider viewing angles.

This information isn't always published by smaller manufacturers, but DaLite has a UST material which is a lenticular design. They claim a half angle brightness of 85 degrees which is really solid. They also show some off angle photos of the screen and talk about the wide viewing angles specifically....

This is one of the reasons I would typically use a lenticular screen over the brighter Fresnel screen. I would rather have a wide viewing cone without image uniformity issues.
 
H

Hetfield

Audioholic Samurai
We will pretty much be dead center to the screen. Not off to the side really at all. We should be pretty much right in the middle of screen and middle high. I'm hoping I made the right choice here, it seems like negative feedback here on this UST and screen.
 
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dolynick

Full Audioholic
We will pretty much be dead center to the screen. Not off to the side really at all. We should be pretty much right in the middle of screen and middle high. I'm hoping I made the right choice here, it seems like negative feedback here on this UST and screen.
I wasn't trying to be negative on it. Just point out that by their nature, ALR's limit light output in certain directions. That's how they achieve the ALR function. There are different types of ALR material setups, usually tailored to the style of projector they're matched to.

You'll probably get a lack of enthusiasm for this type of TV in general though as overall projection seems to be out of favor for the most part. Large TVs are generally better overall in performance. These short throw laser projectors probably still hold some pricing advantage yet over the very large format TVs that are starting to become more common, so I get why someone might be attracted to one still.
 
H

Hetfield

Audioholic Samurai
I wasn't trying to be negative on it. Just point out that by their nature, ALR's limit light output in certain directions. That's how they achieve the ALR function. There are different types of ALR material setups, usually tailored to the style of projector they're matched to.

You'll probably get a lack of enthusiasm for this type of TV in general though as overall projection seems to be out of favor for the most part. Large TVs are generally better overall in performance. These short throw laser projectors probably still hold some pricing advantage yet over the very large format TVs that are starting to become more common, so I get why someone might be attracted to one still.

It's all good. There are good and bad points to everything, just seems most of the feedback here is kinda bad, negative and not exactly positive. I was looking at it like 999.99 for 100 inch. Not a big deal we'll see.
 

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