Sony recently announced the expansion of its family of film projectors digital, with the debut of a new version of 10,000 lumens ANSI. Designed for digital projection in cinemas, the new projector the SRX-R210 model was added to the SRX-R220 of 18,000 Ansi lumens.
The SRX-R210 incorporates many design elements of the first generation of Sony SXRD projectors of 10,000 ansi lumens, but adds new features, including single-lamp operation of xenon, the trapezoidal masking of standard screens and curves, and an integrated and safe box, for the reproduction, such as that of the SRX-R220 model.
The SRX-R210 projector can present 2K and 4K content on screens of approximately 12 meters wide. Uses the same lenses as projectors SRX-R110 and SRX-R105 (10,000 and 5,000 Ansi lumens, respectively) from Sony. The new model also has identical auto zoom and autofocus functions. To reduce operating costs, use a single lamp of 3.0 or 2.0 KW.
Other important features SRX-R210 projector:
- Color management software to easily balance and align the color.
- Automated positioning Zoom lens to fill multiple screens format.
- Automatic adjustment of the light emission to maintain a brightness of 14 feet lamberts on the screen.
- Image masking with sufficient margin for an angle of 10 degrees to down.
- A single button to turn on the projector and operations server.
The Media Block server, model LMT-100, and Sony's Screen Management System, complement these projectors to offer exhibitors a system of projection type connect and use.
The Media Block consists of a server and a decoder that contain the components required to enter, decode and play content Digital. The files that store the contents of feature film, as well as those containing the trailers and notices of policy, they are saved in a Raid drive. The user can control the device using a local computer program or through the Sony Screen Management System.
The projector's 4K resolution SXRD comes from its 4096 x 2160 pixel array (approximately 8.8 million pixels), allowing you to deliver four times the resolution of high-speed TVs definition currently used in home theater systems.
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