Originally posted by futant
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I'm not hiding anything.
Lets start off by saying you didn't know for sure what your projector model was, you also indicated you thought you had a 10,000 lumen projector. I didn't claim you didn't, I simply let you know that if you did, it would be a very expensive piece of equipment.
Until 100"+ LCDs become readily available and not $50k+, the ONLY option you have for anything bigger than an 92" DLP is a projector .... for now, which is what we're talking about, not the future.
Projectors require maintenance, surely this wasn't a surprise to you when you bought yours. There is a cost associated with that maintenance. Your car requires maintenance too, I guess you would hate cars if your stupid wife (your words, not mine) didn't ever change the oil and it just stopped running and caused damage to the motor or if your stupid wife (should have never opened that door BTW) just kept driving on bald tires and had a blowout. Obviously you're not that much smarter than her if you didn't clean the filter either.
Bulbs burn out, it's just what they do. Buy a new bulb around the time you are supposed to, clean the filter twice a year, unless you live in a dusty shithole (not implying anything), and you'll be fine. If you seriously can't do that, you don't need a projector. Don't blame the technology for your laziness and neglect.
I've personally installed hundreds of projectors over the last ~12 years. I have literally never fielded a call asking for a service return to clean out broken glass from a busted bulb. I am NOT saying it doesn't happen, I'm saying it doesn't happen regularly. Again, laziness and neglect is most likely the culprit. I have talked to several "pros" in my office and they have had a few calls to clean out a busted bulb or two, but bear in mind that there is several decades of experience in my office.
You do need to have a fairly dark room to truly experience the technology of a projector. I've never been to a Tinseltown where they left the lights up during the movie. Not all rooms or homes are equipped with a room worth putting a projector in, since OP really hasn't touched too much on that, it's really difficult to say if his home is even going to work or not. However, room lighting level was mentioned very early in the thread.
Most bulbs are rated at roughly 2000 hours, conservatively. I'm not that good at math, but you should be able to watch your awesome 100"+ screen (hopefully not projected onto a textured wall) for a little over 5 hours a day, for a year. If you take the cost of a new bulb into consideration, that would be around $20 a month given a bulb cost of $250. Maybe you should ponder a new hobby?
Does that about cover it?
I got 99 problems but a bulb ain't one.
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