Sagem MDP-1600 review

Sagem tries to redefine value for money

TechRadar Verdict

An attractive entry-level option for home cinema freaks

Pros

  • +

    Great value for money

    Compact

Cons

  • -

    Compressed range of brightness values

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Okay, here's the deal. Take a sheet of A4 paper, lop a couple of inches off the short side et voilà, the MDP-1600's footprint. Oh, and on the subject of numbers, here's another: £800 - the price in pounds.

For this very unprincely sum, you get a projector which has a DLP light engine, an output of 1,600 ANSI Lumens and a contrast ratio of 1,500:1. Unlike the earlier figures, however, the last two should not be taken at face value.

Speed limits

On fast moving scenes of certain types - well defined diagonals for example - you clearly see 'staircasing' due to inadequate internal processing. At others times motion tends to look blurred and muddled.

The claimed contrast ratio of 1,500:1 is impressive for a budget projector. Most LCDs fall well short of this value, but in practice the image looks muddy and lacks detail in the near blacks, while the whites are not especially punchy.This is indicative of a compressed range of brightness values.

There is enough raw power in the Sagem to overcome low levels of residual room lighting, but there is little to spare. And the output brightness figure of 1,600 ANSI Lumens simply beggars belief. The projector is bright enough to throw a 2m-wide image in a well blacked out room, but that's the limit.

Colour reproduction is satisfactory, though some simply came out wrong (some blues replaced by greens, for example).

There are many points that could have been better, but ultimately this is a value for money story. Sagem has introduced a bare budget DLP projector at a previously unthinkable price. For all its imperfections, the MDP-1600 is an attractive entry-level option for home cinema freaks.

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