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LG Announces Theater SIze LED Screens

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  • LG Announces Theater SIze LED Screens

    "LG IS NOW MAKING THEATER SIZED SCREENS TO REPLACE PROJECTORS IN SMALLER THEATERS"
    [ via Gizmodo ~ Link To Story w/pix & more here> https://tinyurl.com/4cespkkz ]


    With TVs slowly growing larger and larger, it was inevitable that, one day, they’d eventually replace the need for
    projectors, even in movie theaters. Projectors aren’t going away entirely just yet, but LG’s new super-sized
    "Miraclass LED Screens" can replace them for smaller “intimate” theaters, which are becoming a popular way
    to woo fans back to the cinema.

    For now, the best way to fill a giant screen with a giant picture is still a projector, but the historically finicky technology
    comes with a lot of challenges. To produce enough light for their images, projectors rely on a high intensity light source
    that produces a lot of heat, requiring plenty of cooling to prolong its operating life. That cooling is loud, requiring even
    digital projectors to be hidden away inside separate rooms behind their theaters.
    Projection rooms are relatively small for theaters with seating for hundreds, but with many cinemas trying to lure
    audiences back to the movies with smaller, more intimate theaters featuring lush seating and even food service,
    a dedicated projector room at the back is a waste of space. That’s where LG’s new Miraclass screens can be
    advantageous. Yes, LG’s newest brand is just sticking the words “miracle” and “class” together, because there’s
    nothing classier than a room with sticky, popcorn laden floors.​

    Assembled from smaller panels featuring edge-to-edge self-emissive LED pixels (so seams are invisible to
    audiences), the Miraclass screens boast 24-bit color and up to 300 nits of adjustable brightness, so the pixels can
    be dimmed if being used for non-movie purposes like a corporate presentation. The Miraclass lineup currently
    consisists of four size options: a 5.1 meter (~16 foot) wide screen with either a 4K or 2K resolution, a 10.2 meter
    (~33 foot) wide screen with a 4K resolution, and a 14.1 meter (~46 foot) wide screen with a 4K resolution. That last
    option is close in size to the screens currently found in medium sized theaters. But it doesn’t seem like the technology
    is ready to replace massive, 79 foot wide IMAX-sized projection screens just yet.​

    LG’s Miraclass screens are already available in several theaters in Europe, but are soon to be installed in additional
    theaters around the world, including in Asia and North America. LG hasn’t divulged how much the screens cost, but
    one has to assume they’ll be priced competitively against projector-based systems. Even if they’re more expensive at
    install, they’ll potentially save a theater money in the long run when it comes to power use and maintenance over time.

    {end)

  • #2
    And just years behind Samsung's "Onyx" screen. The laser technology projectors are not all that loud or generate all that much heat. They don't tell you about the heat generated by the LED panels or the power they need or the weight of the screen that often needs additional structure.

    The big one though remains...sound. They still don't have sound coming from behind (through) the screen. Until they do that, it is all just Beta stuff and not ready for widespread adoption. I'm all for emissive screens and I do think they are the future of cinema but anyone putting in the current crop of them has to know that they will be obsolete the day they are put in and better things are yet to come.

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    • #3
      And it's LG. Low Grade.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Frank Cox View Post
        And it's LG. Low Grade.
        Hardly! It all depends on what grade of LG TV or Monitor that you buy. If you go to Worst Buy or Amazon and get the $199 special 50 incher, then that's low grade. You will find LG monitors in most TV stations. And you will find their TV sets in most medical facilities and dialysis centers around the US. Other tv manufactures also use their LCD panels as well. They way out produce Samsung. Almost all manufacturers of panels are scaling back LCD production to concentrate on OLED. I think that was originally a Kodak invention.

        Comment


        • #5
          The LED display companies have to develop LED panels that can allow audio to pass through the boards somehow. I'm not sure how that can be done, especially on some of these boards with very tight pixel pitches. Samsung's "The Wall" system can have SMD LEDs spaced only .085mm apart. That's tight pixel spacing.

          I'm still wondering about the MSG Sphere in Las Vegas and how that very grandiose LED dome screen will perform. It's going to be a hell of a sight, that's for sure. Even the building's spherical exterior will be covered in LEDs.

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