5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 Posted on July 26, 2014 By Lisa Feierman 1. Four Great Home Theater Projectors Compared - WATCH: Introducing the 4-Way Comparison - What’s important when comparing? - Navigating this Comparison2. Four Home Theater Projector Comparison – Page 2 - What These Projectors Have in Common - Some Things That Set Each Apart From The Others - And Number #4 is: - Navigating this Comparison3. 1st Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Brightness - Color Handling and Calibration - Black Level Performance - Watch the comparison! - EXTRA: Subscriber-Only Videos!4. 1st Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Comparison Images - Cost of Ownership - Bottom line on the Optoma vs. the Sony5. 1st Comparison: Optoma HD91 vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance and Shadow Detail - Video: Comparing Color and Brightness6. 2nd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the BenQ W7500 1 - 3D - Watch the comparison! - Brightness and Color - Black Level Performance7. 2nd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the BenQ W7500 2 - Cost of Ownership or Operation - Audible Noise - Styling - Placement Flexibility - Lens Shift - Detail Enhancement - Image Noise - The Bottom Line8. 2nd Comparison: Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. BenQ W7500 Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Shadow Detail and Black Levels - Video: Comparing Brightness, Color, and Calibration - Video: Comparing Brightness, Color, and Calibration - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement Solutions9. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Price - Primary Use - Color Accuracy - Brightness10. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Max Brightness - Max Brightness - Placement Flexibility - Black Level Performance - Ergonomics and Style11. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 3 - Sharpness and Detail Enhancement - Watch the comparison! - Audible Noise - 3D - Warranty - The Bottom Line12. 3rd Comparison: Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Levels - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement13. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 1 - Light Engine - Brightness - Out-of-the-Box Picture Quality - How Calibration Factors In14. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 2 - 3D Performance - Black Level Performance - Watch the comparison! - Sharpness and Detail Enhancement - Image Noise15. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 3 - Cost of Ownership and Operation - Placement Flexibility - Audible Noise - Remotes and Menus - The Bottom Line16. 4th Comparison: Optoma HD91 vs. BenQ W7500 Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Brightness and Overall Picture Quality - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement - Video: Comparing Black Levels17. 5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Brightness - Black Level Performance18. 5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Audible Noise - Image Noise - Watch the comparison! - Color - 3D - Cost of Ownership and Operation - Remote and Menus19. 5th Comparison: BenQ W7500 vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement - Video: Comparing Shadow Detail and Black Level Performance Tough call between these two. Pricing is similar. The Sony VPL-HW40ES is $2499 less any promotions, and the online price of the BenQ W7500 is about the same or $100 higher at this time. The BenQ comes with one pair of 3D glasses, the Sony with none. Both have 3 year parts and labor warranties without replacement programs. The Sony VPL-HW40ES is an LCoS projector with three panels, vs. the W7500 which is a single chip DLP projector. Both are very similarly equipped. The BenQ has a 1.5:1 zoom lens, and lens shift while the BenQ W7500 has slightly more zoom range at 1.6:1, but also has slightly less lens shift range. Call it a tie, but what matters is will it place the way you want it in your room. For a 100” screen size, for example, the Sony can be placed about 8 inches higher up above the screen than the BenQ, which would tend to be an esthetic advantage if you have higher than usual ceilings. Speaking of esthetics, the Sony is relatively sleek looking, controls are hidden, case has smooth curves. The BenQ takes a different approach with its bright, large silver lens hood, it shouts “high tech, look at me!” BrightnessNow to more serious matters. Brightness first. For once, in one of these six head to head comparisons, I can deal quickly with Brightness. These are the two brightest projectors calibrated, and both are only slightly brighter in their brightest un-calibrated modes. The Sony measures in calibrated right around 1500 lumens at mid point on the zoom while the BenQ is 250 lumens brighter, which is only about 16% more. For those of you already owning a projector, the difference in most projectors between full power an eco mode is usually 25-35%, so the brightness difference is going to be about half of that, which is to say: “Subtle!” NOTE: In the image on the right, the BenQ image is on the left, and the Sony is on the right. Click Image to EnlargeAt maximum lumens, the two projectors differ a bit more. The BenQ definitely extends it’s advantage, but the color of the BenQ, full out, is no match for the Sony, who’s color is pretty good, without the heavy green that afflicts the BenQ (and most other projectors in their Dynamic modes). With the Sony, there’s only about another 220 lumens under the hood if you go to Game which is the brightest Mike measured. It should be noted that when comparing the calibrated modes shown in the video clip, that the BenQ does seem to benefit some extra at brightness because of the different gammas. The measured gamma of the BenQ is 2.15, compared to 2.30 for the Sony. That means that all the content except for that closest to brightest and to darkest, gets a boost, making mid-tones, such as the secretary’s face looking lighter than on the Sony. In fairness, I probably should have used Sony’s 2.2 gamma setting, which measured 2.1, which would have reversed the effect. With the BenQ, Mike looked at improving Dynamic which measures 2200 lumens at mid-zoom vs. the Sony’s 1720. Mike looked into improving Dynamic with a “quick-cal”, but reported that by the time he knocked down green enough to have some respectable (but not calibrated) color, it was barely 200 lumens brighter than calibrated. So, unless you need every last lumen to fight ambient light, and willing to tolerate some heavy green color, both projectors again stay within 250 lumens of each other. Score one very small point for the BenQ for being the slightly brighter of the two, but from a practical standpoint, these two are about as close to tie when considering brightness, as comparisons tend to get. Black Level Performance Black level performance – my favorite thing – when compared, was very interesting. The BenQ W7500 has a dynamic iris (which like the Epson projector can softly rumble a bit), while the Sony has none. (Sony’s more expensive HW55ES has a dynamic iris). Since a dynamic iris lowers the entire picture in terms of brightness, for comparing black levels I tried to balance the image brightness with a dim scene (starship). That makes the BenQ a bit brighter on bright scenes, as its iris opens up. These two are close. In our starship image comparison from The Fifth element they look very close to being equal – I’ll call them a tie. But when viewing the Bond night train scene, which is darker overall, the BenQ picks up an advantage, as you can see in these still comparison images. On brighter scenes, the blacks are likely a touch blacker on the Sony, since the BenQ iris would be wide open. But we consider black level performance on bright scenes less critical than on dark ones. Bottom line on black level performance – they are close, but the Sony can’t do quite as well as the BenQ on the darkest of scenes, where there’s the most benefit. 1. Four Great Home Theater Projectors Compared - WATCH: Introducing the 4-Way Comparison - What’s important when comparing? - Navigating this Comparison2. Four Home Theater Projector Comparison – Page 2 - What These Projectors Have in Common - Some Things That Set Each Apart From The Others - And Number #4 is: - Navigating this Comparison3. 1st Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Brightness - Color Handling and Calibration - Black Level Performance - Watch the comparison! - EXTRA: Subscriber-Only Videos!4. 1st Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Comparison Images - Cost of Ownership - Bottom line on the Optoma vs. the Sony5. 1st Comparison: Optoma HD91 vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance and Shadow Detail - Video: Comparing Color and Brightness6. 2nd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the BenQ W7500 1 - 3D - Watch the comparison! - Brightness and Color - Black Level Performance7. 2nd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the BenQ W7500 2 - Cost of Ownership or Operation - Audible Noise - Styling - Placement Flexibility - Lens Shift - Detail Enhancement - Image Noise - The Bottom Line8. 2nd Comparison: Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. BenQ W7500 Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Shadow Detail and Black Levels - Video: Comparing Brightness, Color, and Calibration - Video: Comparing Brightness, Color, and Calibration - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement Solutions9. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Price - Primary Use - Color Accuracy - Brightness10. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Max Brightness - Max Brightness - Placement Flexibility - Black Level Performance - Ergonomics and Style11. 3rd Comparison: The Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 3 - Sharpness and Detail Enhancement - Watch the comparison! - Audible Noise - 3D - Warranty - The Bottom Line12. 3rd Comparison: Epson Home Cinema 5030UB vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Levels - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement13. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 1 - Light Engine - Brightness - Out-of-the-Box Picture Quality - How Calibration Factors In14. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 2 - 3D Performance - Black Level Performance - Watch the comparison! - Sharpness and Detail Enhancement - Image Noise15. 4th Comparison: The Optoma HD91 vs. the BenQ W7500 3 - Cost of Ownership and Operation - Placement Flexibility - Audible Noise - Remotes and Menus - The Bottom Line16. 4th Comparison: Optoma HD91 vs. BenQ W7500 Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Brightness and Overall Picture Quality - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement - Video: Comparing Black Levels17. 5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 1 - Brightness - Black Level Performance18. 5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2 - Audible Noise - Image Noise - Watch the comparison! - Color - 3D - Cost of Ownership and Operation - Remote and Menus19. 5th Comparison: BenQ W7500 vs. Sony VPL-HW40ES Subscriber-Only Videos - Video: Comparing Black Level Performance - Video: Comparing Detail Enhancement - Video: Comparing Shadow Detail and Black Level Performance 4th Comparison: Optoma HD91 vs. BenQ W7500 Subscriber-Only Videos 5th Comparison: The BenQ W7500 vs. the Sony VPL-HW40ES 2