As well as being one of the fastest growing areas of home cinema, front projection is also one of the fastest changing. The main reason for this is Texas Instruments' almost frenzied drive to improve on its DLP technology. Every time TI launches an improved DLP chipset, manufacturers scramble to unleash the first projector with a revised light engine.

Which leads me neatly to Sim2's HT300E: the first PJ in the UK to use TI's spanking new high-contrast 'HD2 DC3' (DC bit stands for Dark Chip) DLP device.

So what advantages can we hope to see from DarkChip3? First, it hints at another move forward in colour and contrast, thanks to smaller mirror hinges on the DMD device and a new light absorbent coating so we should hopefully also see smoother motion. Exciting, I'm sure you'll agree.

The HT300E follows the standard Sim2 curvy design aesthetic. It comes in three different colours: Royal Burgundy, Shiny Silver, and Gun-metal grey.

As you'd hope with a top spec PJ, it also carries all the connections required by the Cutting Edge club. There's an HDMI input for digital HD feeds, component video jacks, a 12V control trigger for, say, automatically activating a screen, and a 15-pin D-Sub PC jack - plus the usual lesser quality S-video and composite video fallbacks. You don't get DVI, but there's a digital audio loop for routing through sound brought in from the HDMI jack.

Setting the HT300E up is easy in some ways, tricky in others. Positioning the unit in your room is helped by both digital and optical keystone adjustments, but then optimising the picture is rather hindered by over-technical onscreen menus and the need to set up your input preferences first.

The HT300E uses a long-throw lens. You'll need at least 4m between the projector and your screen to enjoy a 100in image. So if your proposed home cinema room is too small to swing a cat, the HT300E isn't the unit for you...

The most interesting - if initially bewildering - feature of the HT300E's is the new Live Colour Management system. Designed for fine-tuning the colour balance and temperature it appears at first completely bewildering. After a little experimentation it turns out to be one of the most flexible yet easy to co-ordinate colour palette adjustments around, and really can improve the way different sources look quite dramatically.

The HT300E's specs impress. The native ratio is an HD-friendly 1280 x 720. Then there's Faroudja's FLI2310 DCDi processing for reducing scaling artefacts and jagged edges; a 6-segment colour wheel with colour corrected filters; and a new 'phono-absorbent' cabinet that claims to keep the running noise to a bare minimum.

You never had it so good

I found the new DC3 device hugely impressive. Contrast is exceptional. Black levels show practically no trace of the greying over or green/blue undertones I'm so used to seeing on (even many high-end) DLP machines, nor any hint of DLP's common green dot noise. Peak whites enjoy a terrifically video-friendly tone and pitch, without looking forced or 'shiny'. And every tiny brightness gradation in between is delivered with complete authority.

This latter fact also helps the HT300E produce an exceptionally three dimensional picture that delivers fully on that key home cinema requirement of pulling you into the world of movies.