BenQ Home Cinema Projector
HT3550 | 4K HDR Home Theater Projector with 95% DCI-P3
Check out the brighter model, the HT3560
Learn More About HT3560BenQ exclusive HDR-PRO technology heightens the 4K HDR viewing experience with enhanced tone mapping, expanding the contrast range with brilliant brightness and vivid darkness for hyper-realistic picture quality.
Learn MoreMade possible by Dynamic Iris and Dynamic Black technology, BenQ cinema-optimized Enhanced Tone Mapping amplifies contrast to preserve details in dark areas.
ON
HDR brightness optimization keeps ideal high contrast tailored to different image sizes and various screen gains commonly used in home theaters.
For a fully personalized cinematic ambience, the projector provides optimized movie modes tailored for home cinema and filmlike motion as directors intended.
The 5Wx2 chambered speakers upgraded with a wider frequency range for deep bass and soaring highs, BenQ audio-enhancing technology also provides exclusive EQ algorithms for pure clarity and sensual sound quality.
Cinema Mode
Game Mode
Music Mode
Sports Mode
4K Pixel Enhancer motion-adaptive edge enhancement detects color changes between objects and background to produce sharp edges and precise surface textures.
Enhanced
Inserting 36 interpolated frames between sequences to produce seamless, vivid 60 frames-per-second videos, Motion Enhancer eliminates laggy images, jittery playback, and blurry shadows.
Enhanced
Color Enhancer modulates complex color algorithms to flawlessly render saturated colors, fine gradients, intermediate hues, and subtle pigments.
Enhanced
Flesh Tone function prevents skin tone discoloration caused by the projection beam light, portraying every skin tone in its most beautiful shade.
Enhanced
FAQs
Browse all related FAQsWhy does the 4K DLP Technology produce a slight high frequency noise?
In order to create smooth 4K resolution images, True 4K DLP Technology utilizes high speed pixel displacement and the superimposition of pixels to produce the 8.3 million pixels seen by the viewer. An end result of this process is a degree of vibration that may results in a slight or unnoticeable high-frequency noise.