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How long do you think a professional 1 chip DLP PJ Can last? |
6000 Hours |
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6% |
[ 1 ] |
12000 Hours |
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20% |
[ 3 ] |
20000 Hours |
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20% |
[ 3 ] |
25000+ Hours |
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33% |
[ 5 ] |
I Don't have a clue, just tell us already!! |
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20% |
[ 3 ] |
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Total Votes : 15 |
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 3:22 am Post subject: How long do you think a professional 1 chip DLP PJ Can last? |
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Curious on your guys' opinions on how long you think a professional 1-Chip DLP projector can actually last? I'm just throwing this out there because I've gotten in some Pro 1-chippers and a few of their hour counts surprised me.
I'll tell you all how long one I have here has been running (and still does, albiet quite loudly from the amount of usage its gotten ) after this poll has been running for a week (7 days).
Enjoy the guessing
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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AnalogRocks Forum Moderator
Joined: 08 Mar 2006 Posts: 26690 Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
TV/Projector: Sony 1252Q, AMPRO 4000G
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 3:26 am Post subject: |
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I think a better way to phrase it is how long to the end of the rainbow?
_________________ Tech support for nothing
CRT.
HD done right!
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Curt Palme CRT Tech
Joined: 08 Mar 2006 Posts: 24305 Location: Langley, BC
TV/Projector: All of them!
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 1:40 pm Post subject: |
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I'd say quite high. I've seen a bunch of NEC plasma pro type panels that emitted almost no light, and had burn worse than the toastiest CRT you've ever seen. My guess is that they were on 24/7, and I am sure they were over 10 years old, so that's 80,000 hours+ before they were pulled out of service. I popped the back off a couple, and it looked like they had never been worked on.
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cmjohnson
Joined: 03 Apr 2006 Posts: 5180 Location: Buried under G90s
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 2:31 pm Post subject: |
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As long as you can keep lamps in it.
As per one of TI's papers on DMD lifespan and MTBF, the MTBF of a DMD is at least 5 million hours.
Between 2005 and 2008, TI ran nine DMDs on accelerated life testing for 108,000 hours without failure, equivalent to about 400,000 normal operating life.
In DLP sets, the optical path failures will relate to degradation of the optics due to bleaching and fading of dichroic optical components, adhesive yellowing and failure in cemented optical components, color wheel failure at either the motor or the adhesives holding a multi-part color wheel disc together, or age-related electronics failures such as electrolytic capacitor failure.
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 4:02 pm Post subject: |
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Interesting results so far! I think all of you are going to be quite surprised with my answer.
Regarding the DMD lifespan, TI must have seriously liquid cooled those DMD chips during their tests, as I've seen many many DMD failures from over-heating, poor design (poor quality lubricants on the DMD hinges resulting in stuck mirrors), and usage beyond typical projector life-spans.
To be fair though, a color wheel fails far more often than the DMD, but those sets were usually packed tight with dust
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 4:07 pm Post subject: |
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Curt Palme wrote: | I'd say quite high. I've seen a bunch of NEC plasma pro type panels that emitted almost no light, and had burn worse than the toastiest CRT you've ever seen. My guess is that they were on 24/7, and I am sure they were over 10 years old, so that's 80,000 hours+ before they were pulled out of service. I popped the back off a couple, and it looked like they had never been worked on. |
Ha! I've got a Pioneer 61" professional plasma display that was used for presentations in a board room, too bad they never turned the thing off or bothered to put a screen saver on the computer it was connected to. Sadly it has Windows 2000 desktop burn-in... in COLOR! Still usable if watching cinemascope movies, but for normal PC usage, the burn in is too noticable.
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2016 3:10 pm Post subject: |
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It's time to reveal the answer to how long a pro 1 chip DLP PJ can last. Thank you to the 11 of you who voted, interesting results
Those of you who voted 25,000+ hours were correct. I have had several liquid cooled Panasonic 1 chip DLP sets come in with hour counts of over 26,000+ hours and zero operational issues, and thats pretty good considering some of them never get filter changes and have generic bulbs thrown in them.
Now the set I have here that made me start this poll has a whopping 65,615 hours of usage. Thats just under 7.5 years of continuous usage. The set itself is only 8 years old! So far this is the highest hour projector I have ever seen in person, or anywhere else, and it was still operating. All the fans are worn out, they are louder than hell, the light path is literally cooked (the plastics have almost completely deteriorated where the lamps install) the chassis plastics are also cracking and nicely baked, and to top it off: the DMD chip itself had 3 stuck pixels and what you see in the photo below:
So thats the answer
Edit: Yes, the DMD chip itself has actual BURN in. the micro mirrors still operate as they should, but the image being projected from this machine was on it so long it actually burned the mirrors!
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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WanMan
Joined: 19 Mar 2006 Posts: 10273
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Link Posted: Mon Mar 21, 2016 10:42 pm Post subject: |
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I wondered if TI engineered the DMD to fail after a certain point well beyond even 25K hours. I mean, how could you sell a second, third and forth unit if the first one is still running.
BTW, 7.5 years of continuous use in 8 years? Was this a commercial unit? Who leaves on their tv 24x7? Also, I wonder if turning units on an off has something to do with increased frequency of failure.
_________________ Trust no one. Absolutely no one. Advice of the board.
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2016 2:10 pm Post subject: |
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WanMan wrote: | I wondered if TI engineered the DMD to fail after a certain point well beyond even 25K hours. I mean, how could you sell a second, third and forth unit if the first one is still running. |
It wouldn't really surprise me if it was engineered to fail. I know thats how a lot of things made today are designed, so why not a DMD chip? Most people/places would never even use a projector past 20k hours anyway, they would want something newer and this and that and yada yada
I do wonder though, places that buy the new laser light source PJs, I wonder if they will be willing to fork out the price for those new fangled laser bulbs after they hit their 20k mark, I'm sure those aren't cheap!
Quote: | BTW, 7.5 years of continuous use in 8 years? Was this a commercial unit? Who leaves on their tv 24x7? Also, I wonder if turning units on an off has something to do with increased frequency of failure. |
Close, these were government units. I have no idea how they had them setup for usage, but I'm guessing it was some mission critical type of setup that required the use of at least one projector to remain on 24/7.
To be fair the 65k projector (along with the other units like it that I have here) are all liquid cooled machines, designed for just the application they were used in. I'm sure the longevity of the 65k projector can be attributed to it being on most of its life. I have seen enough equipment that has been steadily used or "always on" that still works over the same equipment that had barely any use. It makes sense really since something thats warmed up such as a projector, will stay at that constant temperature vs getting hot and cold every 8 hours its turned on and off. less expansion and contraction of all the parts means less likely to fail.
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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ecrabb Forum Moderator
Joined: 13 Mar 2006 Posts: 15909 Location: Utah
TV/Projector: JVC RS40, Epson 5010
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Link Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2016 9:11 pm Post subject: |
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Jeremy112 wrote: | WanMan wrote: | BTW, 7.5 years of continuous use in 8 years? Was this a commercial unit? Who leaves on their tv 24x7? Also, I wonder if turning units on an off has something to do with increased frequency of failure. |
Close, these were government units. I have no idea how they had them setup for usage, but I'm guessing it was some mission critical type of setup that required the use of at least one projector to remain on 24/7. |
Yep... Command and control, monitoring centers, networking operations centers... I would think WanMan would be pretty familiar with the idea of a NOC since he works for a wireless carrier.
SC
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cmjohnson
Joined: 03 Apr 2006 Posts: 5180 Location: Buried under G90s
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Link Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 3:04 am Post subject: |
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I've seen 67,000 hours on a government surplus Marquee 8000 I once got from gov liquidation.
It still worked great, but for the tubes that were positively baked. If I ever get a steak that brown from a restaurant,
I'm punching the chef in the face.
Only by turning off every light and letting my eyes fully adapt to the dark could I see the hours meter displayed, and only directly on the tube face, and only on the least burned tube (red) by swapping the green video cable to the red neck card.
It had about 7.6 years of continuous run time on it and the chassis was barely 8 and a half years old as per the date of manufacture. The tube burn was so bad that there wasn't even any visible pattern to it anymore. It was ALL charcoal. My guess is that it was displaying a continuous video feed from a security camera. Totally a guess. And I am sure that the machine had been retubed once or twice.
A CRT projector chassis can last as long as the capacitors hold out. But digitals have a variety of age related issues, with heat and UV doing damage to plastics and adhesives and bleaching and degrading some optics. As we've seen, even DMDs can wear out.
I'm thinking that D-ILA projectors using LED or laser light sources could be the ultimate winner in the longest service life without needing refurbishment category. No moving parts other than fans, and it may be possible to design one to be fanless.
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cmjohnson
Joined: 03 Apr 2006 Posts: 5180 Location: Buried under G90s
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Link Posted: Sun Apr 10, 2016 10:43 pm Post subject: |
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Oh, incidentally, that "screen burn" as you describe it may not be what you think it is.
I have some DMDs out of a projector that had a power supply failure (a big 3 chipper)
that took out the DMD formatter power so quickly that the DMDs just stuck in their last
displayed frame. Which in this case was a checkerboard pattern.
They will hold that pattern FOREVER, or until reinstalled and put back into service.
Odds are that the DMD shown above is in the same state. It may have some worn out mirrors
and flaky pixes because of it, but I'll bet it'll reset if put back into a working projector.
Permanent image retention on interruption of signals IS one of the characteristics of a DMD.
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Jeremy112
Joined: 28 Sep 2006 Posts: 2645 Location: Fond du Lac, WI
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Link Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2016 2:47 pm Post subject: |
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cmjohnson wrote: | Oh, incidentally, that "screen burn" as you describe it may not be what you think it is.
I have some DMDs out of a projector that had a power supply failure (a big 3 chipper)
that took out the DMD formatter power so quickly that the DMDs just stuck in their last
displayed frame. Which in this case was a checkerboard pattern.
They will hold that pattern FOREVER, or until reinstalled and put back into service.
Odds are that the DMD shown above is in the same state. It may have some worn out mirrors
and flaky pixes because of it, but I'll bet it'll reset if put back into a working projector.
Permanent image retention on interruption of signals IS one of the characteristics of a DMD. |
A bit late to the reply here I might be, but what the hell. The DMD chip was actually permanantly stuck that way, it displayed what you saw on the DMD in the photo, on screen, it was quite horrible to view and totally not usable. I know what you're talking about though, when I pull DMDs out of junk PJs they do leave the last image they had on the DMD, though unlike most DMDs, the 65k hour one did not reset itself and just remained the way you see it.
Still, that many hours, I think it would be time for an upgrade anyway
_________________ When I'm asking for a Model number, that doesn't mean I'm asking for a nude photo with your number on it
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donaldk
Joined: 17 Jun 2008 Posts: 308
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Link Posted: Thu Jul 13, 2017 12:40 pm Post subject: |
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Jan/Feb. 2005 that 5500 was launched/demoed at ISE by Panasonic/Lang AG, liquid cooled dmd for 24/7, or was it 18/7 demoed in a metal pedestal cube rear projection shooting diagonally up.
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