| The
Integra DLV-100 and
FPV-1 Video
Projection System |
|
Breaking Barriers in
the Price slash
Performance Arena |
|
Clement Perry |
|
12
September 2002 |
Specifications
FVP-1
Inputs: Composite (BNC),
S-Video (4-pin),
Component (BNC),
HD/Computer Pass (D15M)
Outputs: RGB.
Aspect Ratios: 4:3,
Anamorphic, Letterbox
Controls: Brightness,
Contrast, Color, Tint,
Noise Reduction, Detail
via RS-232 and direct
access Infrared

Address:
Integra Research
18 Park Way
Upper Saddle River, NJ
07458
Phone: 800-225-1946
Fax: 201-785-2650
Website:
www.Integrahometheater.com
Price: Total $8,000
The cost of building a
home theater with a true
theater quality picture
- either two piece, rear
projection or plasma -
has dropped
significantly over the
past five years, while
the quality of the
components meant to
project images on your
screen has taken
tremendous leaps
forward. The auspicious
arrival of DTV, HDTV and
DVD answers some of the
many questions as to why
home theater has been
such a rousing success.
A major reason, of
course, is the new
lightweight and
inexpensive technology
developed by Texas
Instruments called
Digital Light
Processing, or DLP.
In 1999, while attending
the Stereophile
Show, I got my first
glimpse of the DLP
technology. The
presentation there was
hugely successful,
thanks in part to DVD's
(the quality of DVD made
everything look better)
increasing popularity. I
jumped in with no
reservations after
seeing the Dream Vision
DLP500, (with a list
price of $6999 setting
the industry on it
heels) which I
ultimately purchased,
replacing my Toshiba 43"
widescreen. Since then
the wide success DLP has
gained in quality,
reliability and size has
grown dramatically. With
High-Definition
broadcast gaining steady
momentum, DLP, HDTV and
DVD have joined forces
to create an
unadulterated winning
combination of
technology and
affordability in
two-piece video
projection setups.
Especially if you
stumbled, as I did, upon
the newest offerings
from Integra.

Integra's first foray
into the big-screen
video business is the
incredibly small DLV-100
DLP video projection
system. Measuring a mere
9½
inches wide, 7¾
inches deep and 2
inches tall, and
weighing only 3.3 lbs,
it is possible to mount
the DLV-100 almost
anywhere. Because it
uses a single DLP chip,
it requires no complex
color and image
alignments, making it
easy to install and
setup. HDTV-ready, the
DLV-100 produces an
exceptionally clear and
bright image when
projected up to a
maximum of 100 inches
(measured diagonally).
To take matters further,
Integra teamed up with
Faroudja Laboratories to
co-produce and co-brand
the external Integra
FPV-1 Digital Video
Processor. Most amazing
is that both the DLV-100
and FPV-1 retail for the
highly affordable price
of $8000. You too, with
one good look at this
DLP projector, will
understand why I call
its asking price
affordable.
HDTV ready and offering
a contrast ratio of
800:1, the Integra
DLV-100 boasts an XGA
native resolution of
1024
× 768 with 1000
ANSI Lumens in Normal
mode and 750-800 ANSI
Lumens when operating in
Long Life mode, which is
stated to extend bulb
life and provide quieter
fan operation. Atop the
DLV-100 are two LEDs
(on/standby and status)
while source, auto
adjust, menu, cancel,
select and enter buttons
complete what looks like
a well thought out
design. The rear of the
DLV-100 supports inputs
for composite, S-Video,
and RGB with computer
ports making it PC
friendly. A USB port
allows for direct
connection of a mouse
for use with on-screen
menus. Other features
include Digital Zoom, a
built-in slot for a
Compact Flash card, and
a presentation viewer
for creating "slide
shows" with images from
a digital camera.
The Integra/Faroudja
FPV-1 Digital Processor
converts an interlaced
signal into an
unadulterated, high
frequency 768p
progressive signal that
is a pixel-to-pixel
match with the DLV-100.
Personally witnessing
Faroudja's Native Rate
scalers (NR) with the
patented Cross-Color
Suppression and 10-bit
adaptive digital comb
filter destroy one of
those all-in-one units
on a 50" Pioneer was all
the evidence needed to
convince me of
Faroudja's superiority.
With features like their
patented Diagonal
Correlation
Deinterlacing, that rids
ones picture of unwanted
jagged-edged motion
artifacts and their
Edit-Detection circuitry
with 3:2 pull-down that
provides the smoothest
possible images from
film-based video
sources, it's no wonder
why this two piece unit
picture wowed me. The
FPV-1 accepts component
video, S-video,
composite, and
HD/computer inputs
(VGA-style 15 pin) and
has an RGB video output.
Common user-friendly
front-panel control
features include
brightness, color,
contrast, tint, and
selectable aspect
ratios: 4:3 standard,
4:3-widescreen and 16:9
widescreen. Advanced
setup options allow far
more flexibility for
picture controls, such
as Y/C adjustments and
horizontal-vertical
sharpness, and far
outdistance comparably
priced DLPs in this
area. An RS232 control
port allows the
processor to work with
AMX, Crestron and other
home automation systems.
As most monitor only
devices, the DLV-100 has
no provision for dealing
with audio.
Using the same tabletop
positioning as the Dream
Vision seemed optimal
for setup for the
DLV-100, while the FPV-1
found a comfortable spot
in my rack. Once
accomplished, which took
all of fifteen minutes,
the on-screen menu was
easy to flip through via
the hand held remote.
The DLV-100 and FPV-1's
on-screen features are
much more expansive than
the Dream Vision, which
by the way, makes it
good and bad. Good if
you know what you're
doing and bad because
there's much more
settings to potentially
screw up. One feature I
desperately needed in
the Dream Vision was
keystone correction
since I employ an
ever-so slight tilt of
the DLV-100 to center
its picture on my
100-inch Da-lite screen.
Unfortunately, this
produces trapezoidal
distortion and keystone
correction is the
perfect tool to keep the
screen perfectly
rectangular. The
DLV-100's digital
keystone correction
fixed this in a snap.
Demo after demo showed
me this DLV-100/FPV-1
combo was, out of the
box, quite an
improvement over the
first generation DLP
chips. The
DLV-100/FPV-1's picture
is much sharper,
brighter and cleaner
than the Dream Vision,
even without the FPV-1.
Viewing the DLV-100
through the FPV-1 took
its picture quality
considerably further.
Watching the
heart-wrenching Vietnam
drama We Were
Soldiers through the
DLV-100/FPV-1 combo
reveals the
DLV-100/FPV-1's
marvelous image clarity.
Blacks were noticeably
blacker, creating
greater overall
contrast, while whites
were shown with a
brilliance that was
quite impressive. Flesh
tones appeared natural
in both day and night
scenes throughout this
very intense film. The
incredibly light output
of the DLV-100/FPV-1
shows consistently
throughout this film
showing how brighter the
newest DLP chip is, in
general, and how
excellent these two
units perform together,
in particular.
Watching the two-disc
set of Steven
Spielberg's
Artificial Intelligence,
which boasts an
excellent 1.85:1
anamorphic picture,
showed even blacker
blacks - as deep space
scenes should appear -
while maintaining
excellent color
saturation and detail.
While not crazy about
this futuristic sci-fi
flick, I found the
scenes hauntingly
beautiful. Ditto, the
Hughes Brother's From
Hell DVD. Though
some scenes are quite
grotesque, this take on
Jack the Ripper, shot
almost entirely at
night, provides oodles
of detail from this
excellently transferred
2-disc set (2.35:1).
When you can see the
lapel and buttons on a
black suit against the
night, while maintaining
proper reds and blues,
you know you've got
something special. While
night scenes were
rendered with aplomb,
showing off this combo's
shadow detail, I did
notice the overall color
taking on a greenish hue
during some day scenes
(ala The Matrix).
This tells me that
either this transfer
isn't a perfect one
throughout, or this is
exactly what the
filmmaker had in mind.
Using the DVD Video
Essential disc showed
you can get an
exceptionally good
picture with a little
adjustments right out of
the box, though
professional calibration
from an ISF trained pro
is recommended.
Switching to an HDTV
broadcast of HBO-HD
using an RCA DTC-100
receiver through the
FPV-1's 15-pin VGA
throughput connection
was spectacular. For the
first time under real
world conditions with a
system priced this
modestly, could I see a
picture of this quality
and magnitude. The
DLV-100/FPV-1's level of
clarity, color and
detail easily surpassed
even the best DVD's I
had. I use Sampo's
SME-34WHD5 16:9 HDTV
downstairs and it shows
a quite remarkable
Hi-Def picture on its
own 34-inch screen.
However, after viewing
HBO-HD on a near
100-inch diagonal screen
with incredible
resolution shows me size
matters.
Kid Billionaire Mark
Cuban, who recently
purchased his own
network on Direct TV
(channel 199), boasts
some of the most
spectacular Hi-Def video
clips I've seen come
from a Satellite feed.
The DLV-100 threw quite
a three-dimensional
picture in Hi-Def, and
images appeared with
greater focus and were
incredibly crisp.
Replays of the Winter
Olympics, for example,
showed the power and
superiority of HDTV over
virtually every
reference DVD I own.
Watching the speed
skating tournament
proved breathtaking for
the eyes. As good as the
speed skaters looked,
what proved even more
astounding was the shot
of the audience when the
Hi-Def cameras zoomed
over them. To see a
collage of thousands of
people in colored
sweaters, jackets and
coats stand out so
individually vivid and
sharp, with no color
bleeding or smearing,
was breathtaking. This
high level of quality
isn't isolated to Direct
TV Satellite. NBC, CBS
as well as PBS
affiliates, have also
joined in HDTV
programming. Thanks to
NBC-HD, The Tonight
Show with Jay Leno
has me hypnotized.
There's probably nothing
more beautiful than the
look of this broadcast
when it comes to color
saturation and picture
quality. I sat, slack
jawed, while watching
Jay go through his
monologue, which is no
less corny, but the
quality of the picture
was the closest I've
felt to peering through
the proverbial window.
In closing, the Integra
DLV-100/FPV-1 combo is
more than a bargain for
the big screen home
theater buff. In my
humble opinion, it's a
downright steal. It's
not perfect; the DLV-100
will exhibit a high
level of fan noise.
Nothing too distracting,
but nonetheless
noticeable on quiet
scenes in a movie. That
aside, the Integra
DLV-100/FPV-1 combo
serves as a clear and
obvious reference for me
where DLP technology is
heading. The Faroudja
FPV-1 will set you back
about $4000 if purchased
separately from
Faroudja, and the
DLV-100 will set you
back $5,000 when
purchased solo. So I ask
you, for a total list
price of $8000, how can
you go wrong? More
importantly, there's
nothing in a country
mile that I've been
exposed to that can
equal the
DLV-100/FPV-1's
versatility, simplicity,
ease of setup and most
importantly, picture
quality. Nothing but
accolades have been
showered by everyone
that has seen its
picture. It transforms
my listening room into a
seriously good-looking
home theater rig. Hey,
somebody pass the M&M's!
The price of admission
to your favorite flick
just got a lot cheaper
thanks to the folks at
Integra.

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