After learning about projectors, the specs don't tell you much when shopping for a projector other than overall brightness, and projectors with similar specs often show drastically different results. Each user's location and room brightness are different. The following parameters are for your reference only.
1. Brightness. Nowadays, many users will choose high-brightness projectors. In fact, if they are viewed in a dark environment, too bright projectors will cause eye discomfort.
2. Contrast ratio is an important indicator for projectors, it is the difference between the darkest black and the brightest bright spot that the projector can reproduce, the data on general projector specifications is used to compare different brands of projectors, so Better to read more reviews.
3. Color gamut. A projector's color gamut describes the range of colors that can be reproduced. A good 1080p home theater projector meets the full Rec.709 color gamut created for HD content. Better 4K/UHD projectors meet or come close to the full DCI-P3 specification currently used for 4K content.
4.D65 color mode. Most projectors offer a factory-adjusted picture mode with different color profiles and brightness. Better home theater projectors have a color model that strictly adheres to these industry standards, including a neutral gray "D65" color temperature on white.
5. Fan noise. Fan noise specs can help compare projectors, but the numbers don't reflect the pitch of the noise, which affects how disruptive it is.

