ViewSonic Pro8200 review

This pocket rocket offers a lot of picture for the price

ViewSonic Pro8200
This pocket rocket offers a lot of picture for the price

TechRadar Verdict

The ViewSonic Pro8200 is a nice enough budget 1080p projector, given the ticket price. However, despite its many plus points the package is undermined by poor motion resolution, and that panning 'skip' is definitely irritating.

Pros

  • +

    Excellent colour fidelity

  • +

    good connectivity

  • +

    bright enough for a partially lit room

  • +

    modest footprint

Cons

  • -

    Limited motion resolution

  • -

    noisy runner

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The latest entrant in the increasingly crowded budget 1080p projector market, the ViewSonic Pro8200 has an impressive resumé.

At a tidy 3.63kg, this diminutive 2,000 lumens light cannon bristles with connection options, sports TI's BrilliantColor picture technology and utilises a freshly minted 0.66in Digital Mirror Device for ultra-spiky detail.

ViewSonic pro8200

With a fringe on top

Straight out of the box, it's apparent that the default black level setting of the Pro8200 is too light. It doesn't take long to work out why. Using a 20/20 step B&W scale, I tweaked the gamma to give a deeper, more contrasty image, which immediately brought that old DLP chestnut, rainbow effect, to the fore.

Colour fringing remains an issue with single-chip DLP, despite advances in wheel technology. To confirm this I called on my chum Buster Keaton. His 1922 comedy The Frozen North is awash with the sort of contrasty black and white that provides perfect fringe-testing fodder.

If you are sensitive to DLP's colour rainbows, you can always run gamma low to minimise them (although blacks are rendered a mid-grey).

Video processing comes via Pixelworks PW980 silicon, which offers 10-bit colour and motion adaptive de-interlacing. With no shortage of picture tweaks available, it's really not too difficult to get a good image.

Colour fidelity is excellent and I found the reds were particularly convincing.

There are, unfortunately, serious problems with motion resolution and image panning. A horizontally scrolling monoscope pattern confirms that subjective resolution drops from around 1080 lines, when stationary, to a smudgy 600-700 lines when travelling.

Even worse, our Pro8200 sample performed a curious little jump/skip as the image panned. This hiccup proved constant and consistent.

When I examined test patterns, the effect was all too obvious, although within general video hubbub it's less easy to spot, but it's still there.

Nice for the price

Overall I'd rate this as a nice enough budget 1080p projector, given the ticket price. However, despite its many plus points the package is undermined by poor motion resolution, and that panning 'skip' is definitely irritating.

Steve May
Home entertainment AV specialist

Steve has been writing about AV and home cinema since the dawn of time, or more accurately, since the glory days of VHS and Betamax. He has strong opinions on the latest TV technology, Hi-Fi and Blu-ray/media players, and likes nothing better than to crank up his ludicrously powerful home theatre system to binge-watch TV shows.