2

Hisense PX1-Pro Review: A Gorgeous Home Theater in a Box | WIRED

 1 year ago
source link: https://www.wired.com/review/hisense-px1-pro/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
Jun 12, 2022 8:00 AM

Review: Hisense PX1-Pro

This short-throw laser projector is a Dolby Atmos-enabled home theater in a box.
HiSense PX1 Pro projector on orange and red abstract background
Photograph: HiSense

If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIRED

Rating:
WIRED
Easy to set up. Gorgeous, bright image. Many streaming apps built in. Dolby Vision support. 30-watt Dolby Atmos soundbar built in. No mounting required.
TIRED
Expensive. Not great in bright rooms. No Netflix app.

If you’ve ever considered buying a projector to live out your home theater fantasies, the thought has probably been quickly thwarted by basic logistics. Mounting a projector, routing cables, and finding a compatible surround sound system are all a pain.

Projector makers know this. In the past few years, we’ve seen a huge increase in what's called “short throw projectors”—simpler, all-in-one systems that you typically place on a TV stand a few feet from the wall, rather than hanging them from your ceiling.

As long as you don’t want to watch Netflix, Hisense’s new PX1-Pro is among the best of the bunch. This beautiful 4K laser projector runs on Android and has a built-in Dolby Atmos soundbar, so you don’t need to worry about audio. Snag yourself a screen (and a Roku for Stranger Things), and you’re off to the races.

All for One
Photograph: HiSense

For a device that can project up to a 130-inch screen and fill your room with surround sound, the PX1 Pro is surprisingly svelte. It’s a rectangle about the height of any projector you’ve seen in schools and offices, 20 inches wide and 13 inches deep.

At 20 pounds, the sleek silver rectangle is easier to position than any TV. Just place it in front of your projection screen, level it using the adjustable feet on the bottom, and turn it on. Voilà! Movie time!

The PX1 Pro is a tri-chroma laser projector, which means it has distinct red, green, and blue lasers that bounce onto a mirror and then onto your screen from a close distance. This makes it super bright and means that it actually has some of the best color accuracy I’ve seen on any projector right out of the box. And don’t worry about blinding yourself! It detects when you get too close and will turn off the lasers. Sorry, Dr. Evil. You’re welcome, OSHA.

Its 2200 lumens of peak brightness means that you can technically use it during the day too. Like the vast majority of projectors that aren’t running in pitch-dark rooms, the image looks washed out when you do this, but the shorter throw distance makes it better than most.

Rounding out the spec sheet are 30 watts of built-in Dolby Atmos-enabled sound, providing more than enough volume for small to medium-sized rooms. You’ll probably want a more robust surround sound system or soundbar for “true” cinematic audio, though.

Plug, Play

After you set the thing down and plug it in, just log into Wi-Fi and your various accounts on the built-in Android TV interface, and you’re good to go. One quirk? The version of Android that came with the PX1-Pro doesn’t have a compatible Netflix app. That is a large oversight for a … streaming projector. If I were living with this thing long-term, I’d just buy a Roku. This version of Android TV isn’t that bad, but Roku is still better, and it has all the apps in one place.

Using the projector with outside audio systems like the Platin Audio Monaco (8/10, WIRED Recommends) was a breeze, thanks to the included HDMI eARC (Audio Return Channel) port on the projector. With a single HDMI cable, I got improved audio. But you really don’t need to spring for a huge surround sound system if you just dropped all your bread on this projector. The included 30 watts of sound are actually pretty well-tuned, allowing for clear dialog and even some decent rumble down low.

Visually, it doesn’t just look good. It looks awesome. This is easily one of the prettiest 4K projectors I’ve ever had the pleasure of viewing at home. I set it up with a 100-inch screen in my viewing space and was genuinely overjoyed by how well it rendered everything from Disney+’s Boba Fett to a recent rewatch of Seven Samurai. The quality is crisp and dynamic, and it had better black levels than many projectors I’ve tested in this price range, owing to Hisense’s excellent lasers.

With fast-paced content like Formula 1 races, the projector did a good job of keeping things smooth, and there’s even an auto low-latency mode than can detect when you’re using a game console and automatically change to the ideal settings.

One for All
Photograph: HiSense

I get asked all the time what the best projector is, and I go on the same two-minute rant. For most people, large TVs are just a better option in terms of cost and setup.

But systems like this one, which requires nearly no A/V superheroics, are finally giving me pause. I know I have at least one film buff friend for whom this would be a perfect solution–someone who would be willing to spend this kind of money because they watch enough movies and TV shows, but who just doesn’t want to deal with the maintenance and setup of a more complicated system. It’s also great for renters, because you don’t need to mount anything.

There’s a reason many of us watch stuff on iPads all the time: It’s easy. I have my own home theater, and sometimes the tedious process of turning on the projector and receiver, finding the Roku remote, and turning off the lights can make me say, “Eh, I’ll just watch it on my laptop.” 

That’s why I loved my time with this projector. I actually used it, like, all the time. A single push of the power button on the remote, a click of an app, and you’re watching a 100-inch plus screen in 4K with Dolby Atmos. It’s the kind of thing I dreamed of as a kid, the kind of tech that would have Stranger Things’ Dustin Henderson and his Mormon girlfriend drooling, even in the Upside Down.

The price is steeper than an equivalent or even superior-looking TV and soundbar combination, for sure. But if you love cinema and want an easy way to get an incredibly immersive experience, this projector and a quality screen will get you pretty far, pretty fast.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK