MSRP: $2999.00
SCROLL DOWN FOR KNOWN ISSUES
The brilliant HDR-compatible home theater projector with 4K Enhancementb.
Offering exceptional color performance, the Home Cinema 5040UB delivers immersive experiences. Featuring 4K Enhancement Technology, this brilliant home theater projector supports 4K streaming devices and Ultra HD Blu-ray content. It's also compatible with High Dynamic Range (HDR) content, displaying an extraordinary range of brightness levels with deep, dramatic blacks. Delivering 2,500 lumens of color brightness and 2,500 lumens of white brightness, the 5040UB is ideal for a variety of rooms. Its expansive color gamut displays the entire sRGB and DCI color spaces3. A 1,000,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio ensures rich detail in both bright and dark scenes, while its 16-piece glass lens achieves stunning clarity.
Up to 3x Brighter Colors with Epson*
Brilliant image quality requires high color brightness. Epson 3LCD projectors have up to 3x Brighter Colors than leading competitive projectors.* Delivering 2500 lumens of color brightness and 2500 lumens of white brightness, the PowerLite Home Cinema 5040UB uses 3LCD, 3-chip technology for brilliant images with true-to-life color.
Model:V11H71302
Projection System:Epson 3LCD, 3-chip optical engine
Native Resolution:1080p (1920 x 1080) with 4K enhancement
Color Brightness:2500 lumens
White Brightness:2500 lumens
Product Guides & Additional Information:
http://m.epson.com/alf_upload/pdfs/projectors/brochure_5040UB_specs.pdf
Key Features
Bright and Colorful
Features 2500 lumens of color brightness (color light output)1 and 2500 lumens of white brightness (white light output)1
4K Enhancement Technology
Epson's 4K Enhancement Technology delivers astonishing picture quality — every subtle intricacy is captured.
Contrast Ratio
Up to 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio
Lens Shift
Equipped with horizontal and vertical lens shift, to help configure projector setup
1080p
Supports full HD 1080p resolution
3-Dimensional Picture
2D & 3D Full HD technology puts you right in the middle of exciting, lifelike adventures, and Bright 3D Drive allows for bright, 3D projection.
4K Enhancement Technology— accepts 4K input and supports HDCP 2.2 for truly immersive scenes with 4K content
HDR compatible — enjoy HDR content, with an extremely wide range of brightness levels for images bursting with real-life color
Bright — ideal for a variety of lighting conditions.
The Home Cinema 5040UB has:
Color Brightness: 2500 lumens2
White Brightness: 2500 lumens2
Expansive color gamut — get brilliant, color-rich performance that displays the entire sRGB color space, plus DCI in Digital Cinema Mode
Dramatic Ultra Black levels — an improved iris design delivers up to a 1,000,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio
Remarkable new cinema lens — designed and manufactured in Japan, it features a 16-piece glass structure optimized for 4K performance and precision
Epson Image Enhancement Technology — features Super-resolution and improved Detail Enhancement to sharpen and refine images for lifelike smoothness and clarity
Powered lens position memory — preset up to 10 positions for motorized focus, zoom and lens shift; features 2.1x zoom and ultra wide lens shift
Outstanding service — 2-year limited warranty and toll-free support
Eco Features
RoHS compliant
Recyclable product4
Epson America, Inc. is a SmartWay[emoji769] Transport Partner5
For more information on Epson's environmental programs, go to
www.epson.com/environment
****TIPS****
Manually Setting HDR
Menu -> Signal -> Advanced
**********video explaining 4:4:4**********
Royboy 365 suggested a spot for known issues
*****KNOWN ISSUES*****
From Epson regarding the HDR issue:
Epson is aware of this, and so far the testing has shown only one manufactures (Philips) where it does do the HDR. There has been a request to the engineers for a fix.
The Samsung UBD-8500 does not pass 10 or 12bit, and only Rec709. Waiting on firmware update.
Kpump is also reporting that the Epson does not detect HDR from the shield after trying several cables.
Looks like the Philips player is the only player that provides HDR to the Epson at this time.
Member Ix reports being able to stream in HDR on Nvidia device. I do not have the latest Panasonic UHD player to report on that.
Thanks to cnorth12
Samsung player has HDR streaming through Amazon App.
No Netflix HDR as of yet. Firmware update supposedly anytime, but who knows?
Philips has only 2 apps, Netflix and Youtube no HDR.
Xbox One S offers Netflix HDR streaming but that's it and of course the 4k blu-ray player that comes built in
From wbcollegekid
I spoke to one of the senior technical gurus at Epson. Several days ago I alerted them to the fact that the Samsung UBD-8500 was not passing 10 or 12bit, and only Rec709. The guy who I spoke to today said because of that they went and purchased the Xbox One S, Samsung, and Phillips. As I stated yesterday, and now confirmed by Epson, the Phillips is the only player capable of doing 10/12bit. The Rec.2020 is only a container for the P3 color space. The Epson cannot natively do Rec.2020. When the Epson receives HDR, it converts it to the HDR2 preset, which is for P3 color space for the Digital Cinema setting. However, manually switching to HDR1 preset in Bright Cinema mode gives you P3 color space. Bright Cinema mode is best for HDR.The partial 12bit in the manual refers to it dithering 10bit signal to 12bit. Many current TVs that advertise HDR are 8bit that dither to 10bit. All in all, I am very happy with the capabilities of this projector
So here's my latest crack at trying to sum up compatibility between the Epsons and various devices. This isn't perfect. Please post corrections with supporting pictures or documentation. If we can get this close to correct, maybe it can be stickied somewhere.
Source for some of this info:
http://www.acousticfrontiers.com/uhd-101-v2/
Baseline info:• The HDMI chipset within the Epson has a bandwidth limitation of 10 Gbps
• There are limitations to the signal that the Epson can accept due to this chipset
• 4k Blu-rays are encoded as 4k24 / 4:2:0 / 8-bit Rec709 (non HDR) or 10-bit Rec2020 (HDR10) neither of which are supported by the HDMI 2.0 specification
• Some form of signal conversion must occur in order for any device using HDMI 2.0 to accept a 4K Blu-ray signal
• The signal transmitted by the device must fall within the Epson’s 10Gbs HDMI chipset limitation for it to be displayed on the projector
Samsung K8500 4K Blu-ray Player & Xbox One S• Both convert Blu-rays to 4k24 / 4:4:4 / 8-bit Rec709 which Epson can support
• HDR movies with Rec2020 color are reduced to Rec709, so HDR is stripped
• The resulting image for HDR movies generally appears too dark on the Epson
Phillips, Panasonic, Oppo (hopefully)• Each convert the signal to 4k24 / 4:4:4 / 8-bit Rec 709 which the Epson supports
• HDR movies with Rec 2020 color are converted to 4k24 / 4:2:2 / 12-bit Rec2020 which the Epson supports
• The resulting image generally appears appropriate other than the Epson not having enough lumens to display HDR as intended
Fury & Oppo (hopefully)• Both send an Epson compatible signal, but have the ability to strip HDR, while leaving the expanded Rec2020 color intact for those who feel the Epson is too dark for HDR
Roku Ultra (4K)• Sends 4k24 / 4:4:4 / 8-bit Rec709 which is supported by Epson
• HDR movies with Rec2020 color are reduced to Rec709, so HDR is stripped (despite the screen showing 8-bit HDR BT2020, HDR BT2020 requires at least 10-bit color – is Rec2020 color really being preserved here? )
Amazon Fire Stick• HDR signal is downgraded to 4k / Rec709
YouTube• YouTube 4k videos are natively up to 4k60 / 4:2:0 / 8-bit
• If your player can send that native signal, the Epson can handle it
• Players that send the signal properly include: ????
Netflix• Netflix’s 4k videos are natively ?????
• If your player can send that native signal, the Epson can handle it
• Players that send the signal properly include: ????
Gaming (PCs, 4k games on PS4 Pro & Xbox Scorpio)• The Epson’s HDMI chipset (10 GBPS limitation) will only accept 4k60 at 4:2:0 / 8-bit color
• It is unknown whether these gaming devices will send 4k signals in this format. If for example they send the signal as 4k60 / 4:4:4 / 10-bit, the signal will fail or be downgraded to 4k60 / 4:2:0 / 8-bit color
• Either way, 4:4:4 will get downgraded to 4:2:0 and/or color will be downgraded to 8-bit (non-HDR) assuming the source was HDR to begin with
Future video devices:• High Frame Rate (HFR) 4k Blu-ray will display with nothing higher than 8-bit color on the Epson
• If a future format support 4:4:4, color can be no higher than 8-bit for it to work on the Epson
• Dolby Vision’s goal is to be 12-bit color. This should work with the Epson, assuming the player can send the signal as 4:2:2