Age is never on your side, unless you are seeking a short-term (5-years or less) solution. Projectors, inherently, have a finite life (this ain't film no more). Servers have a shorter lifespan. Each light engine has but so much use before you'll get a stuck pixel...each board has but so much life before you get a failure...the same with every other part on a projector. What those times are will vary within each production, each model. However, there is a finite life span, none-the-less.
The early 4K stuff was all about screens over 40-feet so they are going to be on the high-lumen side of things. The early lasers are going to be closer to beta and experimental than production (how many do you think they made?). I wouldn't touch a DP4K-xxL, unlike the xenon machines, when had a LARGE production run (lots of parts, lots of customers to keep satisfied), those are going to have support issues sooner and, likely, the knowledge base for them will diminish quickly too.
In 4K laser, I would stick to what is out now. They are becoming the normal machines (we sell more 4K than 2K now and all laser).
The early 4K stuff was all about screens over 40-feet so they are going to be on the high-lumen side of things. The early lasers are going to be closer to beta and experimental than production (how many do you think they made?). I wouldn't touch a DP4K-xxL, unlike the xenon machines, when had a LARGE production run (lots of parts, lots of customers to keep satisfied), those are going to have support issues sooner and, likely, the knowledge base for them will diminish quickly too.
In 4K laser, I would stick to what is out now. They are becoming the normal machines (we sell more 4K than 2K now and all laser).
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