http://www.sim2usa.com/home/us/node/22615
SIM2 demonstrated a brilliant—and extremely expensive—solution to the problem of projecting high dynamic-range (HDR) images in a home theater: a dual-projector setup using two Super Lumis Pro 1080p 3-chip DLP projectors that were precisely aligned on an 11-foot-wide Draper TecVision XT1000X screen (gain 1.0). One of the projectors was reproducing high-brightness parts of the image while the other was reproducing the low-brightness parts, and the effect was stunning.
The content was standard Blu-ray, so the system was stretching the dynamic range beyond what was intended by the grading process. But as a technology demo, it revealed how much dynamic range is possible using two projectors in such a configuration—the blacks were inky, and the peak luminance was 95 foot-lamberts! I can't wait to see this demo with real HDR content
SIM2 demonstrated a brilliant—and extremely expensive—solution to the problem of projecting high dynamic-range (HDR) images in a home theater: a dual-projector setup using two Super Lumis Pro 1080p 3-chip DLP projectors that were precisely aligned on an 11-foot-wide Draper TecVision XT1000X screen (gain 1.0). One of the projectors was reproducing high-brightness parts of the image while the other was reproducing the low-brightness parts, and the effect was stunning.
The content was standard Blu-ray, so the system was stretching the dynamic range beyond what was intended by the grading process. But as a technology demo, it revealed how much dynamic range is possible using two projectors in such a configuration—the blacks were inky, and the peak luminance was 95 foot-lamberts! I can't wait to see this demo with real HDR content