LED Projectors 101
With attractive qualities like energy efficiency and long life spans, LED is entering home theater projection.
A new wave of LED-based projectors is hitting the market from a number of manufacturers, including high-profile specialty companies Runco (left) and SIM2.
For enthusiasts and environmental supporters, the rapid deployment of light-emitting diode (LED) technologies in the video industry could end up becoming a landmark culmination of energy savings and performance - making everybody happy.
For just more than a year, LED technology has slowly filtered into the video category through pico projectors and less commonly known products.
The technology seemingly burst upon the specialty electronics marketplace through product introductions from manufacturers like SIM2, Runco, Digital Projection Inc. (DPI) and projectiondesign. Companies like Wolf Cinema, LG and Samsung have joined in the LED development race because of the technology's attractive characteristics such as local dimming, plentiful colors and lack of dimming or burnout over time.
Leading the video industry's charge into this frontier is Luminus Devices, a suburban Boston-based company that is developing lighting solutions for a variety of applications. The company's patented PhlatLight LED is a solid-state technology that Luminus describes as a combination of LED and laser light.
"He developed the manufacturing processes to implement this technology into an LED that can be cost effective and produced in high volume," says Bellosguardo. The development of this technology, he adds, facilitates Luminus' ability to produce LEDs that are bigger than those of traditional size, to be used for more demanding applications like home theater projectors.
"Luminus develops large LED s with very high brightness and high power. The rationale on why Luminus developed large-format LEDs is in response to industry demand and applications that traditional LED s could not achieve."
The first commercial product became available in 2006 in rear-projection TVs from Samsung, Bellosguardo says. Since then, Luminus has worked with companies such as Acer, BenQ, Chi Lin, Delta, LG and Samsung to include LEDs into small pico and more traditional size projection systems.
"Many more companies in the lighting industry are using PhlatLight LEDs in a variety of indoor and outdoor applications that include architecture, avionics, entertainment, medical and dental, manufacturing, machine vision street lighting," he adds.
PhlatLight is not a light-engine technology, but rather a new type of light source that replaces the need for traditional bulbs (and effectively eliminates your clients' worries about replacing those bulbs every couple of years). Bellosguardo acknowledges the use of LED lighting does require some changes to how light-engine companies develop their products, but notes that PhlatLight can be used with any manufacturer's product.
For just more than a year, LED technology has slowly filtered into the video category through pico projectors and less commonly known products.
The technology seemingly burst upon the specialty electronics marketplace through product introductions from manufacturers like SIM2, Runco, Digital Projection Inc. (DPI) and projectiondesign. Companies like Wolf Cinema, LG and Samsung have joined in the LED development race because of the technology's attractive characteristics such as local dimming, plentiful colors and lack of dimming or burnout over time.
LED 101
Leading the video industry's charge into this frontier is Luminus Devices, a suburban Boston-based company that is developing lighting solutions for a variety of applications. The company's patented PhlatLight LED is a solid-state technology that Luminus describes as a combination of LED and laser light.
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Hands On: SIM2 MICO 50 Projector
PhlatLight LEDs' name comes from "the underlying, enabling technology that we call photonic lattice, which is a nano structure embedded into the LEDs, and essentially helps with light extraction," explains Stephane Bellosguardo, product marketing director, projection display business. He says the key to the technology is how it manages light, stemming from the Ph.D. work of Alexei Erchak, who founded the company in 2002 and is chief technology officer.Hands On: SIM2 MICO 50 Projector
"He developed the manufacturing processes to implement this technology into an LED that can be cost effective and produced in high volume," says Bellosguardo. The development of this technology, he adds, facilitates Luminus' ability to produce LEDs that are bigger than those of traditional size, to be used for more demanding applications like home theater projectors.
"Luminus develops large LED s with very high brightness and high power. The rationale on why Luminus developed large-format LEDs is in response to industry demand and applications that traditional LED s could not achieve."
The first commercial product became available in 2006 in rear-projection TVs from Samsung, Bellosguardo says. Since then, Luminus has worked with companies such as Acer, BenQ, Chi Lin, Delta, LG and Samsung to include LEDs into small pico and more traditional size projection systems.
"Many more companies in the lighting industry are using PhlatLight LEDs in a variety of indoor and outdoor applications that include architecture, avionics, entertainment, medical and dental, manufacturing, machine vision street lighting," he adds.
Friendly Technology
PhlatLight is not a light-engine technology, but rather a new type of light source that replaces the need for traditional bulbs (and effectively eliminates your clients' worries about replacing those bulbs every couple of years). Bellosguardo acknowledges the use of LED lighting does require some changes to how light-engine companies develop their products, but notes that PhlatLight can be used with any manufacturer's product.
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News · Product News · Displays · Projectors and Screens · Projectors · Led ·About the Author

Robert Archer, Senior Editor, CE Pro
Bob is an audio enthusiast who has written about consumer electronics for various publications within Massachusetts before joining the staff of CE Pro in 2000. Bob is THX Level I certified, and he's also taken classes from the Imaging Science Foundation (ISF) and Home Acoustics Alliance (HAA). In addition, he's studied guitar and music theory at Sarrin Music Studios in Wakefield, Mass.



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