Businesses are increasingly focusing on reducing their power usage, either to improve efficiency and cut costs or due to corporate responsibility. To achieve this, they are looking for equipment and technologies with power-saving features. However, while traditional power-saving features are static and involve making universal adjustments to device settings, recent products use technology and processing power to create dynamic energy-saving features that don't compromise quality. BenQ has capitalized on these advancements by engineering a SmartEco picture mode for its line of business projectors, enabling businesses to reduce power consumption and prolong the projector bulb's lifespan.
SmartEco is an intelligent Energy-saving picture mode designed to adapt the projector's lamp power usage based on the content of each frame projected. Using image sensing technology and a smart algorithm, the mode allows the projector to continually adjust to the content of a video, ensuring the ideal brightness and contrast levels for each scene.
For instance, when projecting a bright scene, such as a daytime outdoor scene, or a slide with a brighter background, the projector sets its lamp at full power to match the brightness level of the image. conversely, when the video or slide features a dimmer scene or a dark graphic, the projector automatically lowers the brightness to a more suitable power-saving level.
By fluctuating the lamp's brightness levels between 30% to 10% depending on the scene, the SmartEco mode can reduce power usage by up to 70% compared to the normal picture mode, without sacrificing image quality. overall, SmartEco's dynamic energy-saving feature ensures that businesses can reduce power consumption and extend the projector bulb's lifespan while maintaining high-quality visuals.
NOTE: The power consumption numbers used throughout this article may vary depending on the specifications of each projector and the bulbs used.
Although users may understand how BenQ's SmartEco picture mode works, they may still wonder how it differs from the traditional energy-saving Eco modes found in many projectors. The main difference is that normal Eco modes typically reduce the projector's light source power levels by 20 to 30% across the board, regardless of the content being projected. This means that the lamp remains at 70 to 80% power in both dark and bright scenes, leading to complaints about the image being too dark when the Eco mode is enabled.
In contrast, SmartEco mode adjusts the lamp power levels dynamically, dropping down to as low as 30% for dark scenes while boosting back to full power during bright scenes. This dynamic adjustment results in two main advantages over normal Eco modes. Firstly, by allowing the lamp power to drop to levels below the 70 to 80% range of normal Eco modes, SmartEco can achieve a higher degree of energy-saving. Secondly, by enabling a return to full lamp power during bright scenes, SmartEco ensures that image quality and brightness remain optimal when needed, avoiding the issue of a dark projected image that often arises with Eco modes.
Light mode |
Bulb Power |
Highest Brightness |
Light mode Normal Mode | Bulb Power Fixed at 100% | Highest Brightness Fixed at 100% |
Light mode Eco Mode | Bulb Power Fixed at1 70 – 80% | Highest Brightness Fixed at1 70 – 80% |
Light mode SmartEco Mode | Bulb Power Variable 2 30 – 100% | Highest Brightness Measured at 100% |
1 Eco mode will set it power level based on the bulb’s specifications at a range between 70 – 80%
2 SmartEco mode will automatically vary its power level based on the image shown
Despite the advantages SmartEco has over traditional Eco modes, there are still various scenarios where switching the projector to its normal Eco mode is preferable from an energy-saving perspective. This is because, with the blanket decrease in lamp power that a normal Eco mode entails, the user is guaranteed a 20 to 30% decrease in power consumption (with an equivalent increase in the bulb’s lifespan), while with SmartEco the amount of energy-saving varies since the power consumption of the lamp floats between 30 to 100% depending on the content of the projected image.
Thus, in extreme cases where the projector needs to consistently project bright images, the use of SmartEco might result in negligible, or possibly zero, energy-saving benefits. With this in mind, there are a couple of general guidelines that the user should consider in regard to which type of power-saving mode suits them. For content that features brighter images and/or video, Eco mode will produce dimmer images than SmartEco but will save more energy, for content that features darker images and/or video, SmartEco will produce dimmer images than Eco mode but save more energy. The user can then weigh the tradeoffs for each scenario and make the decision that works best for them.
In terms of which power-saving mode is the right one to choose, there is one final point to mention: that the space in which the projector is used will also play a role in which picture mode is ideal. For businesses and organizations this means conference rooms that feature bright lighting and/or large exterior-facing windows are suitable settings for SmartEco use since it allows for maximum brightness when needed while also retaining the energy-saving capabilities of picture dimming. Conversely, conference rooms with softer lighting and/or no windows are recommended to stick with a normal Eco mode whose steady brightness levels ensures that the image never gets too dark and that lower power-consumption is maintained.
There’s another power-saving feature embedded in many BenQ business projectors that organizations will find useful in their quest to conserve energy: Eco Blank. Eco Blank is a feature that allows the projector to automatically switch to a blank (black) screen after 3 minutes of idle video (imagery with no movement) or no input signal. During the time in which the blank screen is shown, the projector will reduce its power consumption by 70% while still keeping itself ready to resume projection once content is ready/available. Not only is this a way to reduce power consumption during sessions in which the projector is needed, but it’s also an energy-saving failsafe in cases where the projector is accidentally left on after use.