Sony VPL-HS20 review

Can the VPL-HS20 succeed where other Sonys have failed?

TechRadar Verdict

If you have the right kit, the HS20's step-up talents are well worth considering. If not, it's pretty expensive

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On paper, Sony's Cineza projector concept rocks: affordable, designer models designed to appeal to ordinary, non-technical home cinema fans. Some early models even shipped with a free screen!

But, so far, the picture quality of these machines has sadly fallen short of our standards. We're hopeful the VPL-HS20 will change that. The reason? Simply that it's actually not the range's entry-level machine (that's the disappointing VPL-HS2), and as such gives us our first glimpse of what a 'step-up' Cineza can do.

Bright ideas

For starters, the picture isn't any brighter than that of the cheaper Sanyo and Panasonic in this test. With Iris switched on, it's actually less bright. Radiant scenes, like Kill Bill's cuts to Budd in the desert, thus don't look as bright as they should. Then there's the contrast, which again struggles to better the efforts of Sanyo or Panasonic. The Iris feature certainly helps, but dark scenes - like The Bride's dumping of Sofie Fatale at a hospital - are still slightly flattened by a faint grey mist over what should be pure blacks. Also on the HS20's 'good but not perfect' list are colours. Saturations are rich and generally noiseless, but flesh-tones can suffer LCD's familiar problems of over-ripeness and greenishness.

Thankfully the HS20 does stand out from its budget brethren in one key regard, by dispensing almost entirely with the mesh-like panel structure that afflicts so many LCDs. It also scores points with detail, especially with a high-def or progressive source, and more so if you're using a digital input. With a progressive scan picture, Kill Bill's opening shot of The Bride's bloodied head enjoys the original grainy tone Tarantino intended.

So our conclusion is this. If you have kit with a digital video output, and/or a high-definition source, the HS20's step-up talents are well worth considering. For everyone else, though, the relatively high cost probably isn't worth taking on.

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