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BenQ TK700 4K HDR Gaming Projector with HDMI 2.0*2, 16ms Response Time at 4K with Enhanced Dark Visual Details, 3200 Lumens, Game Modes, 5W Chamber Speaker, for PS5 & Xbox Series

£9.9£99Clearance
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In HDR, changing Lamp Mode from Normal to ECO resulted in a 30% reduction of light output in any HDR picture modes, while Smart ECO resulted in a 27% reduction in light output, and Lamp Save resulted in 38% light reduction. BenQ TK700 ANSI Lumens Mode Initial impressions of the out of the box (OOTB) performance pre-calibration were that Bright and User would be very suitable for Bright Room viewing with a fair amount of ambient light. If you wanted a little more accuracy in that setting, the Living Room picture mode would be the ideal go-to. Dark room viewing would be best to utilize Cinema picture mode. With any of these picture modes using either Native or Normal color temperatures would come down to preference. The HDR modes are a little simpler due to both modes performing roughly the same. None of the picture modes were dead on accurate OOTB however, and that was very visible in all of the colors.

UHD/HDR Viewing. Viewing HDR on the TK700 was somewhat hit or miss. It was excellent overall while gaming, which again is this projector's primary focus. In higher APL (average picture level) scenes for both gaming and movies it also performed very well. It was in movies that had dark scenes with low APL where it sometimes performed well and at other times not so much.The next game I wanted to try was Gran Turismo 7 on PlayStation 5. This game also required a small amount of time to adjust to the difference in latency, though it took less time than with King of Fighters. Unfortunately, GT7 does not have a 120fps mode. While running the game in its 4K/60 HDR mode I found that my breaking was slightly off when going around corners. Outside of that everything else virtually felt the same as when played on my OLED. This was another game that was displayed beautifully on the projector with rich and vibrant colors, great HDR, and pure immersion. Another treat playing at 100 inches in HDR. The BenQ TK700 is a very competitively priced, high-lumen gaming projector with excellent input lag suitable for today’s fast-paced gaming. Its performance will allow users to game on the big screen without breaking the bank. The devices I used for reviewing content post-calibration were Xbox Series X, PlayStation 5, Gaming PC with Nvidia GeForce RTX3090 graphics, Oppo UDP-203, and Fire TV 4K. User picture mode uncalibrated is 99.6% as bright as Bright picture mode and HDR10 picture mode is 99.2% as bright.

This short-throw projector requires at least two metres between the projector and the wall to reach the 100-inch mark, and while the TK700STi advertises a 100-inch maximum, we found that it could retain a perfectly viewable picture at 120-inches on the wall. In concert with its 3,000 lumens brightness – which is about as bright as you’ll want to get in a home environment – the 4K display is remarkably crisp and vibrant, thanks to its HDR10 support. The TK700 did a decent job with shadow detail and highlights in SDR. In HDR it didn't fare as well as I would have hoped; note that the TK700 does not offer any type of dynamic iris to assist with dark content. Motion was excellent however in everything I demoed while using it from games, to movies, and test patterns. This projector does not have any motion interpolation features, which makes perfect sense considering it is a gaming projector and to get the best performance when it comes to input latency you would want all of that turned off. So it's nice to see it has such good motion on all types of content without the need of such features. Among the other notable features of the TK700 is 3D, which is actually very bright when triggered, though the projector does not offer any control to increase or decrease the 3D effect. Also, the TK700 includes BenQ's LumiExpert, which is useful for automatically adjusting perceived brightness by tweaking the gamma based on the ambient light in the room. This feature may prove useful if you place this projector in a multi-purpose room such as a living room that has a fair amount of ambient light that changes throughout the day or you like to watch with different levels of room lighting at different times. It’s the colours that swing it for the W1800, though. Not only did this projector slightly exceed Rec.709 in testing but colour accuracy is fantastic by projector standards, with an average Delta E of 2.89. Its only serious rival here is the Viewsonic X10-4K and that’s slightly more expensive. Designed for the fastest gaming response, the BenQ TK700 brings cinematic gaming, without compromise.

Customer reviews

The BenQ W1800 can do up to 15,000 hours in its lamp save mode, but only 8,000 in the most balanced Smart Eco mode and just 4,000 when it’s set to normal. After that, you’re looking at a pricey lamp replacement.

The 3,200 ANSI lumen rating for the TK700 is enough to fill a 260-inch diagonal, 1.0 gain 16:9 screen in a dark room, according to Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) recommendations. Using the lower brightness Game mode, the image was easily enough for a 90-inch 1.0-gain screen in a dark room, or an 80-inch screen in a family room at night with lights on. In the daytime with the same 80-inch screen and light streaming through windows, the image was watchable, but washed out.

The BenQ TK700 is a great all-rounder that shines for big-screen gaming

Featuring super-high brightness at 3200 ANSI Lumens, the TK700 is ideal for use in ‘normal’ living room light levels. This means you get vivid, dynamic colour, without having to draw curtains and blinds. Regardless of your preferred mode for movies and video, Game mode is the obvious choice for gaming, both for the better shadow detail—the faster you can see what's happening in the shadows, the faster you can react to it—and for its state-of-the-art short lag times for projectors. My Bodnar meter timed the input lag for 4K 60Hz input at 17.0 milliseconds (ms). For 1080p, the lag was 16.9ms at 60Hz, 8.5ms at 120Hz, and 4.3ms at 240Hz. For full HD 3D, the TK700 supports DLP-Link glasses and offers a single 3D mode. I didn't notice any crosstalk in my tests and saw only a hint of 3D-related motion artifacts in scenes that tend to cause them. However, using two different DLP-Link glasses—including one from BenQ—I ran into a repeatable problem that I've never seen before. At specific points in one of our test clips, the colors first changed suddenly and then the glasses lost sync with the left-right alternation of frames. BenQ says it has not been able to replicate the issue, and that if it were to show up, it would be covered under the projector's warranty. Input lag is the major curse for gamers. There’s little more frustrating to a gamer than when the vision just doesn’t respond fast enough to the controls. It can mean the difference between onscreen life or death, a lap record or second place or simply missing out on completing the level in time. With its class-leading 16ms response, the TK700 is amongst the fastest responding 4K projectors in its class. Now there is no excuse for not beating your rival to the draw.

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