Genesis IN112AA User manual [EN]

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Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Marketing Name: Genesis Regulatory Models: P130 P131 P132 Part-Numbers IN112AA, IN113AA IN112BB, IN113BB
IN114AA, IN115AA IN114BB, IN115BB IN114BBST, IN115BBST IN116AA, IN117AA IN116BB, IN117BB IN116BBST, IN117BBST IN118AA, IN188AA
IN118BB, IN188BB IN118BBST, IN188BBST
IN119BB, IN199BB
.2020 | Rev. A0 | Document No. 10000001 | EN
InFocus Corporation
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2 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Contents
Disclaimer ......................................................................................................................................................4
Tra demarks ...................................................................................................................................................5
Safety information ...................................................................................................................................... 7
Notes cautions and warnings ............................................................................................................................ 7
Information symbols and descriptions .........................................................................................................8
Safety precautions ...................................................................................................................................................8
Safety symbols and descriptions ..................................................................................................................10
Using this document ................................................................................................................................ 13
Set up your InFocus..................................................................................................................................14
Turning the projector on / turning the projector off ............................................................................16
Installing batteries in remote control ............................................................................................................17
Placement and distance from the screen ................................................................................................19
Mounting modes....................................................................................................................................................22
Using the projector on screen display (OSD) ........................................................................................23
Views of your InFocus ............................................................................................................................31
Front .............................................................................................................................................................................. 31
Back .............................................................................................................................................................................32
Left side .......................................................................................................................................................................33
Right side ..................................................................................................................................................................33
Bottom .........................................................................................................................................................................34
Remote control .......................................................................................................................................................35
Projector parts and functions .............................................................................................................. 37
Front P130, P131, P132 – 6 & 9 inputs/outputs ....................................................................................... 37
Back P130 – 6 inputs/outputs .........................................................................................................................38
Back P131, P132 –9 inputs/outputs ..............................................................................................................39
Bottom P130, P131, P132 – 6 & 9 inputs/outputs ..................................................................................40
Features comparison chart ................................................................................................................... 41
Specifications overview ........................................................................................................................ 47
P130 – 6 inputs/outputs .....................................................................................................................................47
P131 – 9 inputs/outputs ......................................................................................................................................48
P132 – 9 inputs/outputs .....................................................................................................................................49
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Contents
Contents
Environmental conditions ....................................................................................................................50
Glossary of terms...................................................................................................................................... 51
Getting help and contacting InFocus ................................................................................................ 67
Self help resources ............................................................................................................................................... 67
Contacting InFocus .............................................................................................................................................70
Notices ..........................................................................................................................................................72
Regional & country specific notices ........................................................................................................... 72
RF interference (for USA only) ....................................................................................................................... 73
Manufacturer and EU importer in accordance with EU directives .............................................74
Compliance statements for acoustic noise .............................................................................................74
FCC compliance statement ............................................................................................................................ 75
Restriction of use ................................................................................................................................................... 76
Copyright notice ....................................................................................................................................................76
Copyright attribution............................................................................................................................................76
 ........................................................................................7
......................................................................................
......................................................76
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Disclaimer
InFocus Corporation makes no representations or warranties with respect to this manual and, to the maximum ex­tent permitted by law, expressly limits its liability for breach of any warranty that may be implied to the replacement of this manual with another. Furthermore, InFocus Corporation reserves the right to revise this publication at any time without incurring an obligation to notify any person of the revision.
The information provided in this documentation contains general descriptions and/or technical characteristics of the performance of the products contained herein. This documentation is not intended as a substitute for and is not to be used for determining suitability or reliability of these products for specific user applications. It is the duty of any such user or integrator to perform the appropriate and complete risk analysis, evaluation and testing of the products with respect to the relevant specific application or use thereof. Neither InFocus Corporation nor any of its affiliates or subsidiaries shall be responsible or liable for misuse of the information that is contained herein. If you have any suggestions for improvements or amendments or have found errors in this publication, please notify us.
All pertinent state, regional, and local safety regulations must be observed when installing and using this product. For reasons of safety and to help ensure compliance with documented system data, only the manufacturer shall perform repairs to components.
Failure to observe this information can result in injury or equipment damage.
Copyright © 2020 by InFocus Corporation
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.
InFocus Corporation 13190 Southwest, 68th Parkway, Suite 120, Portland, OR 97223 United States infocus.com
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Trademarks
Trademarks
Trademarks
 Apple, Mac, Mac OS, OS X, MacBook, and iMac are trademarks of Apple Inc. registered in the U.S. and other
countries.
 iOS is a trademark or registered trademark of Cisco in the U.S. and other countries and is used under license.
 APP Store is a service mark of Apple Inc.
 Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista, Internet Explorer, .NET Framework and PowerPoint are either a
registered trademark or trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.
 MicroSaver is a registered trademark of Kensington Computer Products Group, a division of ACCO Brands
in the U.S. and other countries.
 The terms HDMI® and HDMI High-Definition Multimedia Interface®, and the HDMI® Logo are trademarks or
registered trademarks of HDMI Licensing Administrator, Inc. in the United States and other countries.
 HDBaseT® is a trademark of HDBaseT® Alliance.
 InFocus, InFocus LightCast, IN, LightPro are registered trademarks of InFocus Corporation.
 Trademark PJLink® is a trademark applied for trademark rights in Japan, the United States of America and
other countries and areas.
 Wi-Fi®, Wi-Fi Alliance®, and Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA, WPA2)® are registered trademarks of the Wi-Fi
Alliance.
 Blu-ray is a trademark of Blu-ray Disc Association.
 CRESTRON and ROOMVIEW are registered trademarks of Crestron Electronics, Inc. in the United States
and other countries.
 Extron and XTP are registered trademarks of RGB Systems, Inc. in the United States.
 Ethernet is either a registered trademark or trademark of Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd.
 Android and Google Play are trademarks of Google Inc.
 Other product names and logos mentioned in this guide may be the trademarks or registered trademarks of
their respective holders.
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Trademarks
GPL/LGPL Software Licenses
The product may include software licensed under GNU General Public License (GPL), GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), and others.
NOTES
1. The contents of this guide may not be reprinted in part or whole without permission.
2. The contents of this guide are subject to change without notice.
3. Great care has been taken in the preparation of this guide; however, should you notice any questionable points, errors or omissions, please contact us.
4. Notwithstanding article (3), InFocus will not be responsible for any claims on loss of profit or other matters deemed to result from using the Projector.
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Safety information
Various symbols are used throughout this guide and on the product to prevent physical harm to you or other people and damage to property. The symbols and their meanings are explained below.
Read and carefully follow the instructions that are marked with these symbols and labels to avoid injury to persons or damage to property.
Notes, cautions and warnings
CAUTION A CAUTION indicates potential damage to hardware and informs you how to
avoid the problem
WARNING A WARNING indicates potential for property damage, personal injury or
death
NOTE A NOTE indicates important information that provides assistance, guidance
or information for better use of the product
Safety information
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Safety information
These safety and operating instructions should be read before using the projector. After you have read all instruc­tions, save this information for later reference. To prevent personal injury or damage to property, the following symbols are used to show dangerous operation or handling.
Make sure you understand them before setting up and using the projector
These symbols alert you to actions that must be performed.
Instructions Disconnect the plug from the outlet
Do not do Do not
disassemble
Do not
touch
Do not
wet
Do not use in
wet areas
Do not place
on an unstable
surface
These symbols alert you to prohibited actions.
WARNING
Unplug the projector from the outlet and refer all repairs to qualified service personnel under the following conditions:
If smoke, strange odors or strange noises come from the projector.  If liquid such as water, or foreign objects such as metal, insects, paper etc get inside the
projector.
If the projector has been dropped or the housing has been damaged.
Continuing to use under these conditions may result in fire or electric shock. Do not try to repair this projector yourself. Refer all repairs to qualified service personnel. Place the projector near an outlet where the plug can be easily unplugged.
Never open any covers on the projector except as specifically explained in the Users Guide. Never attempt to disassemble or modify the projector (including consumables). Refer all repairs to qualified service personnel. Electrical voltages inside the projector can cause severe injury.
If you are installing the projector on the ceiling, this projector should be installed by qualified technicians using only approved mounting equipment. If installation work is not carried out correctly, the projector could fall down. This may result in injury or accidents. Contact your InFocus authorized dealer to carry out the installation work.
If you use a ceiling mount do not apply adhesives to the mount to prevent the screws from loosening, or if you use lubricants or oils on the projector, the projector housing may crack and the projector may fall from its ceiling mount. This could cause serious injury to anyone under the mount and could damage the projector. When installing or adjusting a ceiling mount, do not use adhesives to prevent the screws from loosening and do not use oils or lubricants.
Information symbols and descriptions
Safety precautions
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Safety information
Do not use the projector where it may be exposed to rain, water, or excessive humidity.
Use the type of power source indicated on the projector. Use of a different power source may result in fire or electric shock. If you are not sure of the power available, consult your dealer or power company.
WARNING
Check the specifications of the power cable. Using an inappropriate power cable could result in fire or electric shock. The power cable supplied with the projector is intended to comply with power supply requirements for the country of purchase. If you use the projector in the country where it was purchased, only use the power cable that came with the projector. If you use the projector in a country other than where it was purchased, use the correct power cable for that country.
Take the following precautions when handling the plug. Failure to comply with these precautions could result in fire or electric shock.
Do not overload wall outlets, extension cables, or power strips. Do not insert the plug into a dusty outlet. Insert the plug firmly into the outlet. Do not hold the plug with wet hands.  Do not pull the power cable when disconnecting the plug; always be sure to hold the plug
when disconnecting it.
Cables should be wired so that they cannot trip people up. Fire or electric shock may result.
Do not modify the power cable. Do not place heavy objects on top of the power cable. Do not bend, twist or pull the power cable excessively. Keep the power cable away from hot electrical appliances. Do not tie the power cable to other cables.
Contact your InFocus authorized dealer if the cable becomes damaged.
Cables should be wired so that they cannot trip people up and so on. This could cause people to fall and be injured.
Do not touch the plug during an electrical storm. Otherwise, you may receive an electric shock.
Do not place any containers of liquid on top of the unit. Spilling liquid of any kind into the projector may result in fire or electric shock.
Do not look into the lens when the projector is on. The bright light can damage your eyes. Also, do not look into the lens using optical devices such as telescopes or other magnifying equipment.
Do not insert or drop metal, flammable, or foreign objects into the projector's vents or openings nor leave them nearby. Doing so may result in fire, electric shock, or burns.
Do not leave the projector or the remote control with batteries inside a vehicle with the windows closed, in places where they will be exposed to direct sunlight, or in other places that may become extremely hot. Thermal deformation or technical malfunction may occur, which could result in fire.
Safety information
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Do not use sprays containing a flammable gas to remove dirt or dust which is adhering to parts such as the lens or filter of the projector. Because the inside of the projector becomes very hot during use, the gases may ignite and result in a fire.
Do not use the projector in places where flammable gases or explosive gases may be present in the atmosphere. Because the inside of the projector becomes very hot during use, the gases may ignite and result in a fire.
Do not place any objects that are easily flammable in front of the projector's lens, otherwise a fire may occur.
During projection, do not block the light from the projector with the lens cover (where applicable) or a book. If the light from the projector is blocked, the area on which the light shines becomes hot which could cause it to melt, burn, or start a fire. Also, the lens may get hot due to the reflected light which could cause the projector to malfunction.
To stop projection, use the A/V Mute function, or turn off the projector.
Do not install the projector in a location that is not strong enough to bear its weight, or on an unstable surface such as a table that shakes or is tilted. The projector may fall down or tip over causing damage, deformation, or injury.
CAUTION
Do not use the projector in places where there is a lot of humidity or dust, near cooking or heating appliances, or in places where it may come into contact with smoke or steam. Do not use or store this projector outdoors for an extended length of time. Fire or electric shock may result.
Do not block the slots and opening in the projector case. They provide ventilation and prevent the projector from overheating. When installing the projector close to a wall, make sure there is a gap as specified in the Users Guide between the wall and the air exhaust vent. Do not place the projector in the following locations.
Badly ventilated or narrow places, such as inside a closet or in a book case. On soft surfaces such as a rug, bedding, blanket, and so on. Do not cover the projector with a blanket, curtain, or tablecloth. Badly ventilated locations such as inside an AV rack or cabinet. Locations subject to high temperatures, such as near heating equipment. Do not install the projector in an airtight location.  If the projector needs to be installed in an airtight location, it is vital to ensure that air
conditioning and ventilation equipment are also installed.
If the location is not sufficiently ventilated, heat exhausted from the projector will accumulate and could trigger the projector's built-in protection sensors causing the projector to shut down.
Do not stand on the projector or place heavy objects on it. You may fall over resulting in injury or the projector may become damaged.
Safety information
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Safety information
Do not place anything that can become warped or damaged by heat near the exhaust vents. Do not bring your hands or face close to the vents while projection is in progress. Because of hot air coming out from the air exhaust vents, you could get burnt or it could be a cause of warping or other damage to property.
Do not place the source of an open flame, such as a lit candle, on or near the projector
Unplug the projector when it will not be used for extended periods. The insulation may deteriorate, which may result in fire.
Be sure to check that the power is turned off, the plug is disconnected from the outlet and all cables are disconnected before moving the projector. Fire or electric shock may result.
Unplug the projector from the outlet before cleaning. This avoids electric shock during cleaning.
Use a dry cloth (or, for stubborn dirt or stains, a moist cloth that has been rung dry) for cleaning. Do not use liquid, aerosol cleaners, or solvents such as alcohol, thinner or benzine. Water infiltration or deterioration and breakage of the projector housing could result in electric shock.
Incorrect battery usage may cause leakage of battery fluid and battery rupture, which could result in fire, injury or corrosion of the projector. When replacing batteries, take the following precautions.
Insert batteries so that the polarities (+ and -) are correct. Do not use batteries of different types or mix old and new batteries. Do not use any batteries other than those specified in the Users Guide.  If the batteries leak, wipe away battery fluid with a soft cloth. If fluid gets on your hands or in
your eyes, wash and rinse immediately. Replace the batteries as soon as they run out. Remove the batteries if you will not be using the projector for a long period of time. Do not expose batteries to heat or flame and do not put them in water. Dispose of used batteries according to local regulations. Keep these batteries out of the reach of children. Batteries are a choking hazard and are very dangerous if swallowed.
Do not start the projector while the volume is too high. (only models with built-in speaker) Loud sounds may cause loss of hearing. Always lower the volume before turning off the projector. Gradually increase the volume after turning on the projector.
Avoid standing in front of the projector so you do not block the projected images and the bright light does not shine in your eyes. Looking into the projector’s light can damage your eyesight.
Safety information
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Safety symbols and descriptions
The following table lists the meaning of the safety symbols labeled on the projector, remote control, power cord and cables.
No. Symbol Mark Standard / Description
1 IEC 60417 - Symbol No: 5009
Stand-by - to identify the button to place the device in to Stand-by condition
2 IEC 60417 - Symbol No: 5002 Positioning of Cell and
identification of battery holder
3 IEC 62471-5:2005
As with any bright source, do not stare into the direct beam, RG2 IEC 62471-5:2015
4 IEC 60417 - Symbol No. 5017
Earth To identify an earth (ground) terminal in cases where neither the symbol 5019 is explicitly required.
5 IEC 60417 - Symbol No. 5019 Protected Earth
To identify any terminal which is intended for connection to an external conductor for protection against electric shock in case of a fault, or the terminal of a protective earth (ground) electrode.
6 ISO 7000 - Symbol 0434B
IEC 3864-B3.1 Caution To identify general caution when using the product
7 IEC 60417
Caution Hot Surface To indicate that the marked item can be hot and should not be touched without taking care.
8 IEC 60417 Symbol No. 6042
ISO 3864-B3.1 Caution Risk of Electric Shock To identify equipment that has risk of electric shock.
Safety symbols
RG 2
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Using this document
Using the set up & specification document to search for information
This users guide allows you to search for information by keyword or to jump to specific sections using the bookmarks. You can also print specific pages as needeed.
This section explains how to use a PDF document that has been opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader DC on your computer running Windows or Mac OS operating system.
Searching by keyword
Click Edit > Advanced Search. Enter the keyword text for the information you want to find in the search window, then click search. Hits are displayed as a list, select and click one of the displayed hits to jump to that page.
Jumping directly from bookmarks
Click a title to jump to that page. Click + or > to view the lower level titles in the section. To return to the previous page or section:
Windows: Hold down Alt and then press Mac OS: Hold down the command key and then press
Printing only the page or pages you need
You can extract and print only the pages you need. Click Print in the File menu and then specifiy the page or pages you wish to print.
Windows & Mac OS: Specifiy the page or pages you wish to print in Pages in Pages to Print.
To specifiy a series of pages, enter a hyphen between the start page and the end page.
To specifiy pages that are not in a series, enter a comma after each page number.
Getting the latest version of documents
You can get the latest version of this users guide as well as other product information and literature by visiting the InFocus website.
Visit infocus.com, and enter your projector model number in the search box.
Using this document
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Set up your InFocus
Turning the projector on / turning the projector off
Turning on your InFocus projector
1. Securely connect the power cord to the projector and to the mains outlet. When connected, the On/Standby LED will turn red.
2. Connect your signal/source cable to you source device and the projector.
3. Turn on the projector by pressing the
either on the projector keypad or the remote control.
NOTE
The power cable that is supplied with this projector conforms to electrical safety regulations. Do not use a power cable other than the one supplied with the projector. If using the projector overseas, check the power supply voltage, outlet shape and electrical rating of the projector that conform to the local standards, and purchase a proper power cable in the country.
RG2
or
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Set up your InFocus
Set up your InFocus
NOTE
The following conditions must be observed regardless of the country of use.
• The power cable must have the approval marks from the standards authority of the country where the projector is to be used.
• The plug must be of the same shape as the outlets in the country of use.
Examples of standards authorities or certification marks are detailed below
4. The InFocus start up screen (see below) will be display after approximately 10 seconds and the On/Stand­by LED will be flashing blue and then steady blue.
Country name Standards authority or
certification mark
Country name Standards authority or
certification mark
United States of America UL Norway NEMKO
Canada CSA Finland FIMKO
United Kingdom BSI France LCIE
Italy IMQ Netherlands KEMA
Australia SAA Belgium CEBEC
Austria OVE Japan PSE
Switzerland SEV Korea EK
Sweden SEMKO China CCC
Denmark DEMKO Singapore PSB
Germany VDE
NOTE
The first time the projector is turned on, you will be prompted to select the preferred language and projection orientation
NOTE
The size and clarity of the InFocus logo on the startup screen will depend on the resolution of the projector you have purchased, this is expected and normal behavior.
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NOTE
There is a direct correlation between the number of on/off cycles of the projector, proper cooling of the lamp and expected lamp life. Always allow the projector fan to turn off after you power down and before you unplug the projector power cord from the electrical outlet
Turning off your InFocus projector
1. Turn off the projector by pressing the either on the projector keypad or the remote control.
2. The following message will be displayed: Power Off? Press
power key again to confirm turning off your
projector.
3. If the
is not pressed a second time, the message will disappear after 10 seconds and the projector will not
be turned off. When you press the button for the second time, the projector will turn off.
4. The cooling fans will continue to operate for about 10 seconds for the cooling cycle and the On/Standby LED will flash blue. When the On/Standby LED turns solid red, this indicates the projector has entered standby mode. If you wish to turn the projector back on, you must wait until the cooling cycle has finished and the projector has entered standby mode. When the projector is in standby mode, simply press the
button
again to turn on the projector.
5. Disconnect the power cord from the electrical outlet and the projector.
Keypad
No. Item
1. On/Standby LED
2. Lamp LED
3. Temp LED
4.

No. Item
5. Re-Sync
6. Four Directional Select Keys
7. IR Receiver
8. Enter
No. Item
9. Keystone Correction
10. Menu
11. Source 12 Power
Set up your InFocus
NOTE

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Set up your InFocus
NOTE
Batteries are not supplied with any InFocus projector. Please purchase two AAA batteries for use in the remote control of this projector.
Installing batteries in remote control
Installing / replacing the batteries
2. Insert AAA batteries in the battery compartment as illustrated.
1. Remove the battery cover on the back of the remote control.
Set up your InFocus
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3. Replace back cover on remote control, press down until it clicks in to place.
CAUTION
Incorrect battery usage may cause leakage of battery fluid and battery rupture, which could result in fire, injury or corrosion of the projector. When replacing batteries, take the following precautions.
NOTE
Replace only with the same or equivalent type batteries.
 Insert batteries so that the polarities (+ and -) are correct.  Do not use batteries of different types or mix old and new batteries.  Do not use any batteries other than those specified.  If the batteries leak, wipe away battery fluid with a soft cloth. If fluid gets on your hands or in your eyes, wash
and rinse immediately.
 Replace the batteries as soon as they run out.  Remove the batteries if you will not be using the projector for a long period of time.  Do not expose batteries to heat or flame and do not put them in water.  Dispose of used batteries according to local regulations.  Keep batteries out of the reach of children. Batteries are choking hazards and are very dangerous if
swallowed
Set up your InFocus
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Set up your InFocus
Placement and distance from the screen
The projector can be placed on most flat surfaces to project and image. You can also install the projector in a ceiling mount if you wish to use it in a fixed location. An optional ceiling mount is required when suspending the projector from the ceiling.
Note the following points when selecting a location for your InFocus projector:
 Place the projector on a sturdy, level surface or install it using a compatible mount.  Leave plenty of room around and under the projector for ventilation and do not place it next to or on top of
anything that could block the vents.
 Place the projector so that it squarely faces the screen and not at an angle.
NOTE
If you cannot install the projector squarely facing the screen, correct any resulting keystone distortion using the projector controls. For the best quality images, we recommend adjusting the installation position of the projector to achieve the correct image size and shape.
Set up your InFocus
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Projection Distance
Projection distance
The distance at which you place the projector from the screen determines the approximate size of the image. The image size increases the farther the projector is from screen, but can vary depending on the zoom factor, aspect ratio, and other settings.
See the detailed Users Guide for projection distance and image size tables. The Users Guide can be found at infocus.com
WARNING
If you are installing the projector on the ceiling, this projector should be installed by qualified technicians using only approved mounting equipment. If installation work is not carried out correctly, the projector could fall down. This may result in injury or accidents. Contact your InFocus authorized dealer to carry out the installation work.
If you use a ceiling mount do not apply adhesives to the mount to prevent the screws from loosening, or if you use lubricants or oils on the projector, the projector housing may crack and the projector may fall from its ceiling mount. This could cause serious injury to anyone under the mount and could damage the projector. When installing or adjusting a ceiling mount, do not use adhesives to prevent the screws from loosening and do not use oils or lubricants.
Set up your InFocus
NOTE
When using keystone correction your resulting image is slightly smaller.
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Set up your InFocus
CAUTION
Do not block the slots and openings in the projector case.
 They provide ventilation and prevent the projector from overheating.  When installing the projector close to a wall, make sure there is a gap as specified in the Users Guide
between the wall and the air exhaust vent.
Do not place the projector in the following locations.
 Badly ventilated or narrow places, such as inside a closet or in a book case.  On soft surfaces such as a rug, bedding, blanket, and so on.  Do not cover the projector with a blanket, curtain, or tablecloth.  Badly ventilated locations such as inside an AV rack or cabinet.  Locations subject to high temperatures, such as near heating equipment.  Do not install the projector in an airtight location.
If the projector needs to be installed in an airtight location, it is vital to ensure that air conditioning and ventilation equipment are also installed.
If the location is not sufficiently ventilated, heat exhausted from the projector will accumulate and could trigger the projector's built-in protection sensors causing the projector to shut down.
Set up your InFocus
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Mounting modes
Your InFocus projector can be set up and installed in any of the following ways:
CAUTION
CAUTION
Do not operate the projector on its side, this may cause the projector to malfunction.
Do not look at the lens while the projector is on. Serious damage to your eyes could result. The following label, that is indicated near the lens-mounting-section on the projector cabinet, describes this projector is categorized in the risk group 2 of IEC 62471-5: 2015. As with any bright source, do not stare into the beam, RG2 IEC 62471-5: 2015.
Front/Rear
Front Ceiling/Rear Ceiling
Set up your InFocus
RG 2
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Set up your InFocus
Using the projector on screen display (OSD)
OSD Menu tree
Additional details on each feature, function and option in the OSD Menu Tree is available in the detailed user guide which can be found at infocus.com
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Picture Mode
Presentation 1. RGB source default:
Presentation
Bright
Movie 2. YUV source default: Movie
sRGB
DICOM SIM.
User
3D 3. 3D on default: 3D ISF Day 4. ISF Day and ISF Night are valid
while ISF Mode is On or Unlock
ISF Night
Wall Colour
Whiteboard
Blackboard
Light Yellow
Light Green
Light Blue
Pink
Gray
Brightness -50 ~ 50
Contrast -50 ~ 50
Sharpness
~ 15
Colour -50 ~ 50 Only for YUV source
Tint -50 ~50 Only for YUV source
Film
Video
Graphics
Gamma Standard (2.2)
1.8
Advanced 2.0
2.4
BrilliantColor
~ 10
Colour Temp.
Warm
Medium
Cold
IMAGE
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Set up your InFocus
NOTE With DICOM SIM Picture
Mode selected or Blackboard, Wall Colour selected Gamma options will be hidden.
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24 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Colour Settings
Red Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Exit
Green Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Exit
Blue Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Exit
Cyan Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Exit
Magenta Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Yellow Hue
-50 ~ 50
Saturation
-50 ~ 50
Gain
-50 ~ 50
Exit
White Red
-50 ~ 50
Green
-50 ~ 50
Blue
-50 ~ 50
Exit
Reset Exit
RGB Gain/Bias
Red Gain
-50 ~ 50
Green Gain
-50 ~ 50
Blue Gain
-50 ~ 50
Red Bias
-50 ~ 50
Green Bias
-50 ~ 50
Blue Bias
-50 ~ 50
Reset Exit
IMAGE
Advanced
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Set up your InFocus
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Set up your InFocus
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Colour Space
AUTO
RGB Only for non-HDMI
source
RGB (0~255) Only for HDMI
source
RGB (16~235) Only for HDMI
source
YUV
White Level
~ 31
Only for S-Video
Black Level
-5 ~
Only for S-Video
IRE
0
For S-Video Input Source NTSC Signal default: 7.5 PAL Signal default: 0 IRE Adjustment Only for NTSC-M/NTSC-J/NTSC-4.43/ PAL-M/PAL-60
7. 5
Signal
Automatic
Off
NOTE: Only for Analog VGA source
On
Phase
~ 31
Frequency
-10 ~ 
H. Position
-5 ~ 5
V. Position
-5 ~ 5
Exit
Exit
4:3
16:9
For all models but WXGA & WUXGA models depend on Screen Type selection
16:10
Only for WXGA & WUXGA models depend on Screen Type selection
LBX
Only for WXGA, 1080p & WUXGA models.
Native
Original image without any scaling
Auto
Edge Mask
~ 10
Zoom
-5 ~ 2
Image Shift
H -100 ~ 100
NOTE: 50 adjustment of 2 steps per adjustment
V -100 ~ 100
NOTE: 50 adjustment of 2 steps per adjustment
Exit
V Keystone
-40 ~ 40
-20 ~ 20
-10 ~ 10
-40 ~40 P130, P131
-20 ~ 20 P132

3D Mode
Off
DLP
-Link
IMAGE
DISPLAY
Advanced
Format
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Set up your InFocus
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26 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Enhanced
Gaming
Off
1. Only for 1920x1080 60Hz timing
2. Disable Keystone/Overscan/ Zoom/Image Shift/Aspect Ratio when turn On
On
Picture
Mode Lock
Off
On
Language
English English Deutsch German Français French Svenska Swedish Español Spanish Português Portuguese Polski Polish Nederlands Dutch

Hindi Norsk/Dansk Norwegian/Danish Pilipino Filipino Melayu Malay Română Romanian Italiana Italian
簡体中文
Simplified Chinese Suomi Finnish
Greek
Russian Magyar Hungarian
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
3D - 2D
3D
L Only display left frame
R Only display right frame
3D Format
Auto
SBS NOTE: SBS = Side by Side Half Top and
Bottom Frame
Sequential
3D Sync. Invert
Off
On
Exit
DISPLAY
SETUP
3D
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Set up your InFocus
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Set up your InFocus
SETUP
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Language
Čeština Czechoslovak
رع
Arabic
Thai Türkçe Turkish
Farsi
Vietnamese Bahasa
Indonesia
Indonesian
Bengali
Projection
Front Rear Front-Ceiling Rear-Ceiling
Menu
Location
Top-Left Top-Right Center Bottom-Left Bottom-Right
Screen Type
16:10
1. Only for WXGA & WUXGA
models 16:9 2. Relates to Format Setting
Security
Security
Off On Default Password: 1234
Security Timer
Month
~ 12
Day
~ 30
Hour
~ 24
Change Password
Project ID
~ 99
Audio
Settings
Mute
Off On
Volume
~ 10
Audio Input
Default Audio in Only for HDMI
source
Exit
HDMI
Link
Settings
HDMI
Link
Off On
Power On Link
Mutual PJ -> Device Device -> PJ
Set up your InFocus

Page 28
28 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Power Off Link
Off On
Advanced
Logo
Default Neutral
Background Colour
Black Red Blue Green White Logo
Information Hide
Off
On
NOTE: Warning messages &
power off will not be hidden if
activated
Exit
Input Source
VGA S-Video

HDMI
2
Exit
Auto Source
Off On
High
Altitude
Off On
Keypad Lock
Off
1. Keypad unlock hotkey: Press
the "Enter" key on keypad for 5
secs to release keypad lock
On
2. Relate to IR Function: If
Keypad Lock setting from Off
to On, IR Function will be
automatically changed to On
Test Pattern
Red Grid Green Grid Blue Grid White
Remote Settings
IR Function
Off
NOTE: Relates to Keypad Lock:
If IR Function setting from On
to Off, Keypad Lock will be
automatically changed to Off.
On
SETUPOPTIONS
Set up your InFocus

Page 29
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Set up your InFocus
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
User 1
AV Mute
15 Users Settings & Presets
Executed via the AV Mute
Button on Remote Control
Wall Colour Brightness Contrast Gamma Colour Temp.
Colour Settings
RGB Gain/ Bias
Language Projection Security Test Pattern
Auto Power Off (min)
Sleep Timer (min)
Lamp Settings
INFO
Advanced
Direct Power On
Off On
Signal Power On
Off On
Auto Power Off (min)
~ 180
One step: 5, DEFAULT 20
Sleep Timer (min)
~ 990
One step: 30
Quick Resume
Off On
VGA Out (Standby)
Off
Only Supported on P131 & P132
Models On
USB Power
Off
On
NOTE: USB Standby is not
supported
Exit
Lamp
Settings
Lamp Reminder
Off On
Brightness

Bright Eco Dynamic
Remote Settings
OPTIONS
Set up your InFocus
Page 30
30 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
MAIN SUB LEVEL SUB LEVEL 2 SUB LEVEL 3 SUB LEVEL 4 VALUE COMMENTS
Default Setting Default Setting By Source Default Setting By Other
Lamp Reset
No Ye s
Exit
Reset
No Ye s
INFO
Regulatory
P130, P131 or P131
Regulatory Model of Projector
Specified
Serial Number
Input Source
Resolution
Refresh Rate
Picture Mode
Lamp Hours
Bright Eco Dynamic Total
Brightness Mode
Firmware Version
System MCU
Project ID
OPTIONS
Set up your InFocus


 


NOTE
Page 31
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Views of your InFocus
Front
P130, P131, P132 - 6 & 9 inputs/outputs
Back
P130 - 6 inputs/outputs
Views of your InFocus
Page 32
32 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Top
P130, P131, P132 - 6 & 9 inputs/outputs
Back
P131, P132 - 9 inputs/outputs
Views of your InFocus
Page 33
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Views of your InFocus
Views of your InFocus
Left Side
P130, P131, P132 - 6 & 9 inputs/outputs
Right Side
P130, P131, P132 - 6 & 9 inputs/outputs
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34 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Bottom
P130, P131, P132 - 6 & 9 inputs/outputs
55.00 mm 55.00 mm
115.00 mm
107.00 mm
82.30 mm 64.20 mm
Views of your InFocus
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Views of your InFocus
Views of your InFocus
Remote control
Ships with regulatory model P130, P131, P132
No Key Fuction
1 AV mute 2 Power on/off 3 Re-Sync 4 Up 5 Source 6 Left 7 Enter 8 Right 9 Menu
No Key Fuction
10 Down
11 Eco
12 Keystone+
13 Volume+
14 Keystone­15 Volume­16 VGA 1
17 Video 2 18

3
No Key Fuction
19 Page+ 4
20 Aspect 5
21 Magnify+ 6 22 Page- 7 23 Freeze 8
24 Magnify- 9
25

26 Picture 0
27 Mute
NOTE
Some keys may have no function for models that do not support these features.
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36 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
NOTE
When pointing the remote control directly (0 degrees angle) on the IR sensor, the distance between the remote control and the sensor should not be longer than 8 meters (~ 26 feet).
Remote control effective range
Infra-Red (IR) remote control sensor is located on top of the projector. Ensure to hold the remote control at an angle within 30 degrees perpendicular to the projector’s top IR remote control sensor to function correctly. The distance between the remote control and the sensor should not be longer than 6 meters (20 feet).
 Make sure that there are no obstacles between the remote control and the IR sensor on the projector that
might obstruct the infra-red beam.
 Avoid using the remote control in direct sunlight or bright fluorescent lights at near range, as the projector
may not respond to commands under these conditions.
 Please keep the remote control at least 7 feet 2 meters away from fluorescent lamps otherwise the remote
control may not operate as intended.
 If the remote control is close to Inverter-Type fluorescent lamps, it might become ineffective from time to
time.
 If the remote control and the projector are within a very short distance, the remote control may become
ineffective.
 When pointing the remote control towards a projection screen or whiteboard, the effective distance of
20 feet 6 meters from remote to screen to projector may be shortened due to the IR reflectivity of the screen or white board surface.
Views of your InFocus
Page 37
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Parts and functions
Parts and functions
Name Function
1 Air Intake Vent Air to cool the projector enters here
2 Key pad Keys to operate the projector on screen display
3 Status and Warning LED’s Provide information on the status of the projector and error codes
4 Focus Ring Used to focus the image
(Not Applicable for P132 Short-Throw Models)
5 Optical Zoom Ring Used to adjust the image size using optical zoom
(Not Applicable for P132 Short-Throw Models)
6 Projector Lens Images are projected from here
7 Lamp Door Housing Housing for the projector lamp
8 Air Exhaust Vent Hot air from the projector exits here
9 IR Remote Receiver Receives commands from the remote control
Front
P130, P131, P132 6 & 9 Input/Output Models
Projector parts and functions
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38 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Back
P130 models 6 inputs/outputs
Name Function
1 Power Inlet Connects the power-cord to the projector
2 Kensington Lock Slot Attach an optional Kensington lock here to secure your projector
3
nput port
Inputs video signals to the projector from compatible video equipment and computers. This projector is compatible with HDCP.
4 USB-A port
Delivers power 5V/1.5A to optional wireless devices connected to the port. Used to control the projector via an optional wired remote. Used for the delivery and updating of service firmware.
5 VGA input port Inputs signal to the projector from a computer source over a VGA cable
6 S-Video input port Inputs video signal to the projector from a source over a S-Video cable
7 Audio In port Inputs audio signal from connected source to the projector
8 Audio Out Port Outputs audio signal from the current input source to the projector to external
speakers
9 Adjustable rear foot Used to adjust and level the height of the projector
10 Fixed rear foot Used in combination with the rear and front adjustable feet to level the projector
Parts and functions
Page 39
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Parts and functions
Back
9 inputs/outputs P131 & P132 models
Name Function
1 Power Inlet Connects the power-cord to the projector
2 Kensington Lock Slot Attach an optional Kensington lock here to secure your projector
3
 & HDMI 2 Input ports
Inputs video signals to the projector from compatible video equipment and computers. This projector is compatible with HDCP.
4 USB-A port
Delivers power 5V/1.5A to optional wireless devices connected to the  port. Used to control the projector via an optional wired remote. Used for the delivery and updating of service firmware.
5 VGA input port Inputs signal to the projector from a computer source over a VGA cable
6 S-Video input port Inputs video signal to the projector from a source over a S-Video cable
7 Audio In port Inputs audio signal from connected source to the projector
8 Audio Out Port Outputs audio signal from the current input source to the projector to external
speakers
9 Adjustable rear foot Used to adjust and level the height of the projector
10 Fixed rear foot Used in combination with the rear and front adjustable feet to level the projector
11 RS232 port Connects a RS232 cable to a computer to control the projector.
12 VGA/Monitor Out Port Outputs analog RGB signals from the VGA Input port to a monitor.
Parts and functions
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40 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Bottom
P130, P131, P132 6 & 9 input/output models
Name Function
1 Mounting points for optional ceiling mount Attach the optional ceiling mount when suspending the projector
from a ceiling (three points)
2 Adjustable front foot Used to level the projector or move the height of the image
3 Rear Feet (2) Used to level the projector in combination with the front foot
4 Security cable attachment point Pass a commercially available cable lock through here to secure the
projector. You can also attach the optional commercially available wire through here to prevent the projector from falling when ceiling or wall mounted
Parts and functions
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Product features P130
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL
MODELS
IN112AA IN114AA IN116AA IN118AA IN119AA
IN113AA IN115AA IN117AA IN188AA IN199AA
RESOLUTION SVGA XGA WXG A 1080p WUXGA
9 Picture Modes including DICOM Simulation, User Definable and ISF Night & Day
7 Wall Colour Modes Brightness, Sharpness, Contrast, Colour, Tint, Gamma
Adjustment Settings 10 Step BrilliantColor Implementation
Individual Hue, Saturation and Gain Adjustments for RGB, C, M, Y, W
RGB Gain/Bias Adjustments 5 Colour Space Adjustment Settings White and Black Level Adjustments IRE and Signal Settings and Adjustments Aspect Ratio Format Settings 4:3 16:9 16:10 Letter Box Native Auto Digital Edge Masking Digital Image Shift - Horizontal & Vertical Digital Zoom Vertical Keystone Adjustment 3D Activation, DLP-Link Settings & Formats 3D Sync Invert 2D to 3D Setting Enhanced Low Latancy Gaming Mode Picture Mode Lock 27 Selectable OSD Languages Projection Modes - Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling OSD Menu Positioning ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:10 ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:9 Security On/Off Setting Security Timer
Product features P130
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42 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL
MODELS
IN112AA IN114AA IN116AA IN118AA IN119AA
IN113AA IN115AA IN117AA IN188AA IN199AA
RESOLUTION SVGA XGA WXG A 1080p WUXGA
Security Password Selector Assignable Project ID Number Audio Input and Volume Settings
Link Activation and Settings Startup Logo Removal and Background Colour Selector
Projector Information Messaging Overide Input Source Lock Auto Source Setting High Altitude Setting Keypad Lock Setting Built in Test Paterns IR Fuction Setting 15 user presets with single key activation Direct Power On Setting Signal Power On Setting Auto Power Off Setting Sleep Timer Setting Quick Resume Setting VGA Out Standby Setting USB-A Power Setting Lamp Usage Reminder Setting Lamp Brightness Mode Projector Information Table 24/7 Operation Waveform Lamp Colour Enhancement AV Mute
Product features P130
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Product features P131
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL+
MODELS
IN112BB IN114BB IN116BB IN118BB IN119BB
IN113BB IN115BB IN117BB IN188BB IN199BB
RESOLUTION SVGA XGA WXG A 1080p WUXGA
9 Picture Modes including DICOM Simulation, User Definable and ISF Night & Day
7 Wall Colour Modes Brightness, Sharpness, Contrast, Colour, Tint, Gamma
Adjustment Settings 10 Step BrilliantColour Implementation
Individual Hue, Saturation and Gain Adjustments for R G B, C, M, Y, W
RGB Gain/Bias Adjustments 5 Colour Space Adjustment Settings White and Black Level Adjustments IRE and Signal Settings and Adjustments Aspect Ratio Format Settings 4:3 16:9 16:10 Letter Box Native Auto Digital Edge Masking Digital Image Shift - Horizontal & Vertical Digital Zoom Vertical Keystone Adjustment 3D Activation, DLP-Link Settings & Formats 3D Sync Invert 2D to 3D Setting Enhanced Low Latancy Gaming Mode Picture Mode Lock 27 Selectable OSD Languages Projection Modes - Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling OSD Menu Positioning ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:10 ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:9 Security On/Off Setting Security Timer
Product features P131
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44 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL+
MODELS
IN112BB IN114BB IN116BB IN118BB IN119BB
IN113BB IN115BB IN117BB IN188BB IN199BB
RESOLUTION SVGA XGA WXG A 1080p WUXGA
Security Password Selector Assignable Project ID Number Audio Input and Volume Settings
Link Activation and Settings Startup Logo Removal and Background Colour Selector
Projector Information Messaging Overide Input Source Lock Auto Source Setting High Altitude Setting Keypad Lock Setting Built in Test Paterns IR Fuction Setting 15 user presets with single key activation Direct Power On Setting Signal Power On Setting Auto Power Off Setting Sleep Timer Setting Quick Resume Setting VGA Out Standby Setting USB-A Power Setting Lamp Usage Reminder Setting Lamp Brightness Mode Projector Information Table 24/7 Operation Waveform Lamp Colour Enhancement AV Mute
Product features P131
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Product features P132
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE SHORT THROW
MODELS
IN114BBST IN116BBST IN118BBST
IN115BBST IN117BBST IN1188BBST
RESOLUTION XGA WXGA 1080p
9 Picture Modes including DICOM Simulation, User Definable and ISF Night & Day
7 Wall Colour Modes Brightness, Sharpness, Contrast, Colour, Tint, Gamma Adjustment Settings
10 Step BrilliantColourTM Implementation Individual Hue, Saturation and Gain Adjustments for R G B, C, M, Y, W
RGB Gain/Bias Adjustments 5 Colour Space Adjustment Settings White and Black Level Adjustments IRE and Signal Settings and Adjustments Aspect Ratio Format Settings 4:3 16:9 16:10 Letter Box Native Auto Digital Edge Masking Digital Image Shift - Horizontal & Vertical Digital Zoom Vertical Keystone Adjustment 3D Activation, DLP-Link Settings & Formats 3D Sync Invert 2D to 3D Setting Enhanced Low Latancy Gaming Mode Picture Mode Lock 27 Selectable OSD Languages Projection Modes - Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling OSD Menu Positioning ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:10 ScreenType - Aspect Ratio Locking 16:9 Security On/Off Setting Security Timer
Product features P132
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46 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE SHORT THROW
MODELS
IN114BBST IN116BBST IN118BBST
IN115BBST IN117BBST IN1188BBST
RESOLUTION XGA WXGA 1080p
Security Password Selector Assignable Project ID Number Audio Input and Volume Settings
Link Activation and Settings Startup Logo Removal and Background Colour Selector
Projector Information Messaging Overide Input Source Lock Auto Source Setting High Altitude Setting Keypad Lock Setting Built in Test Paterns IR Fuction Setting 15 user presets with single key activation Direct Power On Setting Signal Power On Setting Auto Power Off Setting Sleep Timer Setting Quick Resume Setting VGA Out Standby Setting USB-A Power Setting Lamp Usage Reminder Setting Lamp Brightness Mode Projector Information Table 24/7 Operation Waveform Lamp Colour Enhancement AV Mute
Product features P132
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Specifications overview P130
Specifications overview P130
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL
MODELS
IN112AA IN114AA IN116AA IN118AA IN119AA
IN113AA IN115AA IN117AA IN188AA IN199AA
DISPLAY & OPTICAL
RESOLUTION
SVGA XGA WXGA 1080p WUXGA
800 x 600 1024 x 768 1200 x 800 1920 x1080 1920 x 1200
LENS Manual, 1.1:1 Zoom and Focus
DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY Texas Instruments DLP
COLOUR REPRODUCTION 1073.4 Million Colours
NATIVE ASPECT RATIO 4:3 16:10 16:9 16:10
COMPATIBLE ASPECT RATIO 16:9 & 16:10 16:9 & 4:3 16:10 & 4:3 16:9 & 4:3
ELECTRICAL
INPUTS, OUTPUTS
1x 1x VGA, 1x S-VIDEO, 1x USB-A, 1x Audio In, 1x Audio Out
SPEAKER
Yes, 3W
POWER REQUIRMENT 100-240V @ 50/60Hz
MECHANICAL
INSTALLATION ORIENTATION Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling
DIMENSIONS 313 x 236 x 107 mm / 12.32" x 9.29" x 4.21"
WEIGHT 2.6 Kg / 5.72 lb
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS Operating in 5 ~ 40°C / 41 ~ 104°F, 10% to 85% humidity (non-condensing)
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Specifications overview P131
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE ESSENTIAL+
MODELS
IN112BB IN114BB IN116BB IN118BB IN119BB
IN113BB IN115BB IN117BB IN188BB IN199BB
DISPLAY & OPTICAL
RESOLUTION SVGA XGA WXGA 1080p WUXGA
800 x 600 1024 x 768 1200 x 800 1920 x1080 1920 x 1200
LENS Manual, 1.1:1 Zoom and Focus
DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY Texas Instruments DLP
COLOUR REPRODUCTION 1073.4 Million Colours
NATIVE ASPECT RATIO 4:3 16:10 16:9 16:10
COMPATIBLE ASPECT RATIO 16:9 & 16:10 16:9 & 4:3 16:10 & 4:3 16:9 & 4:3
ELECTRICAL
INPUTS, OUTPUTS
2x 1x VGA, 1x VGA Out, 1x S-VIDEO, 1x USB-A, 1x Audio In, 1x Audio Out,
1x RS232
SPEAKER
Yes, 10W
POWER REQUIRMENT 100-240V @ 50/60Hz
MECHANICAL
INSTALLATION ORIENTATION Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling
DIMENSIONS 313 x 236 x 107 mm / 12.32" x 9.29" x 4.21"
WEIGHT 2.6 Kg / 5.72 lb
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS Operating in 5 ~ 40°C / 41 ~ 104°F, 10% to 85% humidity (non-condensing)
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Specifications overview P132
PROJECTOR LINE GENESIS
PROJECTOR LINE RANGE SHORT THROW
MODELS
IN114BBST IN116BBST IN118BBST
IN115BBST IN117BBST IN188BBST
DISPLAY & OPTICAL
RESOLUTION XGA WXGA 1080p
1024 x 768 1200 x 800 1920 x1080
LENS Fixed 1:1 Lens
DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY Texas Instruments DLP
COLOUR REPRODUCTION 1073.4 Million Colours
NATIVE ASPECT RATIO 4:3 16:10 16:9
COMPATIBLE ASPECT RATIO 16:9 & 16:10 16:9 & 4:3 16:10 & 4:3
ELECTRICAL
INPUTS, OUTPUTS 2x HDMI
, 1x VGA, 1x VGA Out, 1x S-VIDEO, 1x USB-A, 1x Audio In,
1x Audio Out, 1x RS232
SPEAKER Yes, 1x 10W
POWER REQUIRMENT 100-240V @ 50/60Hz
MECHANICAL
INSTALLATION ORIENTATION Front, Rear, Front Ceiling, Rear Ceiling
DIMENSIONS 313 x 236 x 107 mm / 12.32" x 9.29" x 4.21"
WEIGHT 2.9 Kg / 6.39 lb
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS Operating in 5 ~ 40°C / 41 ~ 104°F, 10% to 85% humidity (non-condensing)
Specifications overview P132
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Environmental conditions
Environmental conditions
Be sure to observe the following precautions to avoid malfunctions, operating errors or damage to the projector.
Notes on handling and storage
 Do not use or store the projector in places where it might be subjected to high and low extremes of
temperature. Furthermore, avoid places where the temperature may change suddenly.
 Be sure to observe the operating temperatures and storage temperatures given in the user guide when
using and storing the projector.  When storing the projector, store it in a dry location.  Do not set up the projector in places where it might be subjected to vibration or shock.  Do not set up the projector near high-voltage electrical wires or sources of magnetic fields.These may
interfere with correct operation.  Do not touch the lens with bare hands.  Always attach the lens cover to the lens when not using the projector, to prevent the lens from becoming
dirty or damaged.  Remove the batteries from the remote control before storage. If the batteries are left in the remote control for
long periods, they may leak.  Do not use or store the projector in places where smoke from oil or cigarettes may be present, as it can
adversely affect the quality of the projected images.  Contact your dealer to clean the interior of the projector. If the interior of the projector has not been cleaned
for a long time, dust may build up, which could cause fire or electric shock.  InFocus takes no responsibility for loss or damage caused by damage to the projector outside service
warranty conditions.  When a still image is displayed for a long period of time, image retention may occur on the screen. Do not
display images in the exact same position for long periods.
Notes on carrying the projector
 Turn off the projector power and then disconnect the power cable from the outlet. Furthermore, check that
all other cables have been disconnected.  Attach the lens cover to the lens.  Retract the adjustable foot.  If your model of projector has a handle, hold the projector by the handle when carrying it.  When carrying large or heavy models, make sure it is carried by the number of people specified in the user
guide.
When transporting the projector to InFocus or a InFocus service center for repairs
The internal projector components consist of many glass parts and high-precision parts. When transporting the projector, take the following measures to protect the projector from any damage that might result from shock. Enclose the projector securely in buffer material to protect it from shock, and place it into a strong cardboard container. Be sure to notify the carrier company that the contents are fragile.
InFocus, its service centers and authorized service partners do not accept liability for goods damaged during transit due to inadequate or improper packaging of the projector.
Power cables for Overseas Use
The power cable that is supplied with this projector conforms to electrical safety regulations. Do not use a pow­er cable other than the one supplied with the projector. If using the projector overseas, check the power supply voltage, outlet shape and electrical rating of the projector that conform to the local standards, and purchase a proper power cable in the country.
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Glossary
Glossary
Term Description
1080i 1080i is ATSC high definition 1920 x 1080 interlaced video format where a frame of video is delivered
in two fields. The first field contains the odd lines of the image, while the second field contains the even lines. Each field is updated every 1/60th of a second resulting in 30 frames of video per second.
1080p 1080p is ATSC high definition 1920 x 1080 progressive scan video format where a complete frame
of video is delivered at either 60 or 24 frames per second.
16:9 Aspect ratio of an HDTV signal which is 16 units by 9 units, whatever size those units may be. In the
film trade aspect ratios are described in relation to one, which means this aspect ratio is described as 16/9 or 1.78:1.
2:2 pull-down Method for transferring 24 frame per second film to PAL/SECAM video running at 25 frames per
second.
2:3 Pull-Down 2:3 pull-down, commonly called 3:2 pull-down, converts film footage to NTSC video. Film footage
is shot at 24 frames per second (FPS) and NTSC video is shot at 30 FPS. 3:2 pull-down refers to the electronics needed to convert 24 FPS to 30 FPS so that it can be viewed on a NTSC video device. To accomplish this, 4 frames of film are converted to 5 frames of video by inserting an extra field of film frame every other frame.
3D Ready A projector that is 3D Ready can accept a 120Hz frame-sequential 3D signal from a computer via
either NVIDIA's 3D Vision system or one of several educational software suites. These projectors are not compatible with the HDMI
1.4 3D specification used on 3D Blu-ray players and set-top boxes. We
also refer to this type of 3D as PC 3D Ready.
3LCD Common 3 colour system for projecting images via LCD or liquid crystal display. Uses dichroic
mirrors to separate the RGB components of white light coming from a projection lamp. Each colour is fed to separate LCD panels which control the about of coloured light that passes through. The light from each LCD is recombined using a dichroic prism before going out the lens and on to a screen.
480i 480i is ATSC Standard Definition Television (SDTV) 720 x 480 or 640 x 480 interlaced video format
where a frame of video is delivered in two fields. The first field contains the odd lines of the image and the second field contains the even lines. Each field is updated every 1/60th of a second resulting in 30 frames of video per second.
480p 480p is ATSC Enhanced Definition Television (EDTV) 720 x 480 progressive scan video format
where a complete frame of video is delivered at either 30 or 24 frames per second. 480p also refers to a display format comprised of 854 x 480 pixels, 16:9 widescreen.
720p 720p is an ATSC high definition 1280 x 720 progressive scan video format where a complete frame
of video is delivered at either 60, 30 or 24 frames per second.
Anamorphic A technique for changing aspect ratios by optically or digitally stretching or compressing an image
to or from a format with a different native aspect ratio. Movie studios used this technique to put the first widescreen movies on standard 35mm film and then used an anamorphic lens to recreate the image in the widescreen format in which it was originally shot.
Anamorphic Lens
An anamorphic lens is a lens that has different optical magnification along mutually perpendicular radii. This provides the ability to project a source image of one aspect ratio, such as 4:3, into a different aspect ratio, such as 16:9, by using different magnifications for the horizontal and the vertical dimensions of the projected image.
Anamorphic Ready
A projector that supports anamorphic projection using an optional anamorphic lens.
ANSI American National Standards Institute. A private organization that coordinates and administers
various voluntary consensus standards such as ANSI lumens. The first ANSI standard was for pipe threading in 1919 when it was called the American Engineering Standards Committee.
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52 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Glossary
Term Description
ANSI Contrast Contrast is the ratio between white and black. The larger the contrast ratio the greater the ability of
a projector to show subtle colour details and tolerate extraneous room light. There are two methods used by the projection industry: 1)Full On/Offcontrast measures the ratio of the light output of an all white image (full on) and the light output of an all black (full off) image. 2)ANSIcontrast is measured with a pattern of 16 alternating black and white rectangles. The average light output from the white rectangles is divided by the average light output of the black rectangles to determine theANSI contrast ratio. When comparing the contrast ratio of projectors make sure you are comparing the same type of contrast.Full On/Offcontrast will always be a larger number thanANSIcontrast for the same projector.
ANSI Lumens ANSI lumens is a measurement of the overall brightness of a projector. Because the center of a
projected image is brighter than the corners, ANSI lumens is the most accurate representation of the image brightness. ANSI lumens are calculated by dividing a square meter image into 9 equal rectangles, measuring the lux (or brightness) reading at the center of each rectangle, and averaging these nine points.
Aperture A device that controls amount of light admitted.
Artifacts Flaws and aberrations in a video image that derive from technical limitations in the capture, encoding/
decoding, transmission, and display of a video signal.
Aspect Ratio The ratio of image width to image height. Standard television is 4:3 or 1.33:1. Panavision or
Cinemascope is 2.35:1 with 1.85:1 being quite common as well. Widescreen displays are 1.78:1 or 16:9. times the height. For example, if you want an image 40 inches high then you need a screen that is at least 40 * 1.78 inches wide or 71 inches. Other relatively common aspect ratios are 3:2, 4:3 and 5:4.
Bandwidth The number of cycles per second (Hertz) expressed as the difference between the lower and upper
limits of a frequency band; also, the width of a band of frequencies. Practically speaking, bandwidth is the amount of data that can pass through a given connection per unit of time.
Barrel Distortion Distortion where screen image expands outward towards edges of the screen. Instead of being
square, edges are curved outward like the edge of a barrel. Opposite of pincushion.
Bezel The frame or face of a device, such as, a projector grill, or CRT or LCD display frame.
Black Level The darkest part of a picture. This can vary between display devices and viewing environments.
NTSC black is set at 7.5 IRE, which is very slightly gray. The white level divided by the black level gives a contrast ratio for a particular display device.
Blackboard Mode
Blackboard mode is a projector feature that allows the projector to detect the colour of the display surface such as a chalkboard of painted wall and automatically adjust its output to optimize accurate colour reproduction.
Blanking The period of time that an electron gun is turned off to reposition itself to paint the next part of the
video onto the CRT screen.
Bleeding Video distortion where colour “bleeds” from an object onto other parts of the image which are not
supposed to be that colour.
Blue Laser Colour of the laser used with Blu-ray high definition DVDs. Blue laser light has a shorter wavelength
than red, which is why blue lasers can retrieve and store more data in a given physical area.
BNC Bayonet Nut Connector or British Naval Connector. A high quality, locking cable plug which is used
extensively in professional video.
Bowing Video distortion where lines which should be straight are curved. See barrel distortion and
pincushioning.
Brightness Overall light output from an image. While a brightness control can make an image brighter, it is best
used to better define the black level of the image.
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Glossary
Glossary
Term Description
Brightness (Perceived)
The brightness of a projection system can be precisely measured with a light meter. For example, a typical movie theater is setup to deliver 16 foot-Lamberts. The higher the foot-Lamberts, the brighter the image. A common misconception is that a projector with twice the foot-Lamberts of another projector will be twice as bright. While it is true that a light meter will detect it as twice as bright, your eye will not. The perceived brightness will increase by about 50%. It will not double because the human eye has a logarithmic respond to light.
Brilliant Color
Brilliant Color - a technology developed by Texas Instruments® for its DLP® projectors that produces six channels of colour including red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, and yellow; thereby, allowing an increase in the colour gamut.
Calibrate To adjust with reference to a standard.
Channel A separate signal or signal path.
Closed Caption Closed caption (CC) superimposes a transcript of the audio portion of a video program over the
program image. Its primary use is to provide people that are deaf or hard of hearing the opportunity to read a transcript of the audio as it is being played. Closed Caption is also helpful for people learning to read or learning a foreign language. Closed Caption can also be used to display text unrelated to the program being viewed, such as weather or news.
Coated Optics A variety of materials put on high quality lenses to minimize the amount of light reflected back to the
lamp and the amount of ambient light that mingles with the focused light leaving the lens. Generally good coatings can add 15% or more to the lenses brightness. Other coatings are used for filtering colours.
Coaxial An audio or video cable with a single internal wire with an outer shield that is ground. In audio, a
speaker type where one speaker is positioned within another larger speaker’s cone.
Colour Dynamics
The whitest whites, reddest reds, bluest blues and greenest greens. High colour dynamics are a result of dynamic range/contrast ratios. Having excellent colour dynamics implies rich colours, excellent definition, high contrast.
Colour Saturation
Measure of colour purity. Highly saturated colours emit a very narrow band of wavelengths of light instead of the broader spectrum of frequencies emitted from mixed colours. A display with good saturation capability will look vibrant.
Colour Temperature
Colour balance of white light which goes from red to blue as the temperature rises. Measured in degrees Kelvin, which starts at absolute 0 or –273 degrees Celsius, colour temperature matches the reference standard of the light being emitted from a carbon block heated to the stated degrees. For instance, the early morning sun is around 2500K, which is the same warm light that a carbon block heated to 2227° Celsius would emit. Heating the block further to ~10000° Celsius would emit the same bluish light of a blue-sky mid-day sun. Common colour temperatures are 5500 Kelvin (black and white movies) and 6500 Kelvin (standard colour films).
Colour Wheel Rotating wheel with 3 or more translucent colour filters used to display sequential colour on single
imager light valve based projection devices. The imager reflects or transmits the colour component of a given image when the wheel’s corresponding colour filter is affecting the light passing through to the lens. A 1X wheel cycles through all colours in 1/60th of a second.
Component Video
Component Video is a method of delivering quality video (RGB) in a format that contains all the components of the original image. These components are referred to as luma and chroma and are defined as Y'Pb'Pr' for analog component and Y'Cb'Cr' for digital component. . It is comprised of luminance (Y) and two chrominance channels of blue minus luminance and red minus luminance.
Contrast Contrast increases as the white point increases. Increasing the white point creates a greater
difference between white and black.
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Term Description
Contrast Ratio The ratio between white and black. The larger the contrast ratio the greater the ability of a video
device to show subtle colour details and tolerate ambient room light. There are two industry methods used: 1) Full On/Off contrast measures the ratio of the light output
of an all white image (full on) and the light output of an all black (full off) image. 2) ANSI contrast is measured with a pattern of 16 alternating black and white rectangles. The average light output from the white rectangles is divided by the average light output of the black rectangles to determine the ANSI contrast ratio. When comparing the contrast ratio of video devices make sure you are comparing the same type of contrast. Full On/Off contrast will always be a larger number than ANSI contrast for the same video device.
Crestron RoomView
Crestron RoomView Connected is built into projectors enabling direct network connectivity for remote management of AV networks.
Crestron RoomView® Express software provides enterprise help desk management, remote monitoring and control of global AV networks without any special wiring, hardware or programming. Once connected to the network, classroom teachers and presenters can instantly control any installed RoomView Connected™ projector. With no programming required, AV and IT managers can globally monitor and control networked projectors throughout a school, campus, or corporate enterprise.
Adding a Crestron control processor enables control of all AV devices, lighting and environmental systems on the network from any Crestron touch screen, Web browser and Apple® and Android® mobile devices including iPad™ and iPhone®.
By leveraging the Ethernet port on RoomView Connected projectors and accessing RoomView, AV managers and support staff can remotely take control of classroom technology, troubleshoot and perform remote system diagnostics, track projector usage and lamp life, log network activity and much more. Remote capabilities allow efficient scheduling of projector power-off at preset times, routine maintenance, faster response times to support calls, alert notifications if projectors are disconnected, and broadcast messaging of emergency alerts to all projectors.
Crosstalk Interference of an electrical signal by another electrical signal in close proximity caused by its
electromagnetism.
CRT Cathode Ray Tube.
dB dB or decibel is a measure of relative loudness. 0 dB is the threshold of hearing. 60 dB is equivalent
to normal conversation. 120 to 140 dB is the threshold of pain such as a jackhammer or gun shot. 10 db of change will double the loudness.
Deinterlacer Electronic component that converts an interlace video signal to progressive scan.
Deinterlacing Act of converting an interlace video signal to progressive scan.
Diagonal The diagonal of a screen or flat panel can be computed by using the Pythagorean theorem: squaring
the width, squaring the height, adding them together and taking the square root. A 100" diagonal 16:9 screen measures 49" high by 87" wide; a 100" diagonal 4:3 screen measures 60" high by 80" wide. Use the Projection Calculator to get screen dimensions on all common aspect ratios.
Dichroic A mirror or lens that reflects or refracts selective wavelengths of light. Typically used in projector light
engines to separate the lamps "white" light into red, green, and blue light.
DICOM A DICOM projector (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine) provides the medical
profession with the ability to simulate 21 different levels of grayscale in the rendering of X-rays, CAT scans, MRIs and other medical imaging applications.
DisplayPort DisplayPort is a digital display interface developed by the VESA. The interface is primarily used
to connect a video source to a display device such as a computer monitor, though it can also be used to transmit audio, USB, and other forms of data. Displayport can be used to transmit audio and video simultaneously. The DisplayPort signal is not directly compatible with DVI or HDMI
but passive
adapters can be used to adjust the signal levels and convert the connector style.
Glossary
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Glossary
Term Description
Distortion A usually undesirable variation from an intended output caused by the characteristics of a particular
device.
Dithering Method of displaying intermediate colours that don’t exist in a limited palette by using a pattern of
small dots out of that palette.
DLP
DLP (Digital Light Processing) is a commercial name for a display technology from Texas Instruments® (TI). The technology inside is often referred to as DMD (Digital Micro-Mirrors). It consists of an array of mirrors where each mirror represents a pixel element. For example, a high-definition DLP
projector or rear projector with 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution would have over 2 million tiny mirrors. Each mirror is attached to an electronically driven hinge that controls the amount of coloured light that is reflected from the mirror into the projection lens and onto a screen. Projection systems using DLP
technology
use 1 to 3 DMD devices.
DMD Digital Micromirror Device. Name of the actual imaging chip used in a Texas Instruments DLP
projection systems.
DNR Digital Noise Reduction. A system that reduces picture noise by comparing previous frames to the
present and smoothing out what appears to be noise to the algorithm. Helps reduce flickering in still parts of a video image.
Document Camera
A document camera can be attached to any projector; however, there are projectors that integrate these features either as a camera on an arm that is attached to the projector or a document scanner that is built into the body of the projector.
Dolby Digital A lossy compression system to deliver sound on DVDs, ATSC and DBS broadcasts in up to 5.1
channels. Also called AC-3. See AC-3.
Dolby EX Backwards compatible system to add a sixth channel used for the middle rear playback to Dolby
Digital (AC-3) making it 6.1 or 7.1 sound. 7.1 sound uses an additional center rear speaker playing back a duplicate track. Needs a Dolby EX decoder. See AC-3.
Dolby Pro Logic An analog 4 channel surround sound system with left, right, center channels and a mono rear
channel, typically duplicated across 2 speakers. Rear channel is limited to 7KHz and system stores all channels in a matrix recording on 2 discrete analog channels. Has difficulty playing back non­encoded material at full fidelity.
Dolby Pro Logic IIUpdated version of Pro Logic. Offers better performance with playing back non-encoded sources
over a surround sound system with full spatial cues and fidelity.
Downconvert To convert a higher resolution signal to a lower resolution. For example, 720p to 480p.
DTV Digital Television. A system that uses digital signals instead of analog including the ATSC standards,
DBS and digital cable.
Dual Lamp A Dual Lamp projector has two lamps where one lamp either serves as an automatic backup to
the other lamp or is preprogrammed to switch at specific intervals. The benefit of this type of lamp system is it significantly reduces the probability of lamp failure during use.
DVI Digital Visual Interface. DVI is a standard that defines the digital interface between digital devices
such as projectors, flatscreens and personal computers. For devices that support DVI, a digital-to­digital connection can be made that eliminates the conversion to analog and thereby delivers an unblemished image. It can also carry an analog signal and comes as DVI-I (integrated - analog and digital), DVI-D (digital only) and DVI-A (analog only). Dual link DVI connections add additional resolution capabilities. Specifications on DVI are available at www.ddwg.org.
Dynamic Range The ratio between the highest and lowest levels a device can perform. For a video device it is a
measure of contrast ratio. For an audio device it is usually stated in dB.
Glossary
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56 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Term Description
Edge Blending When more then one projector is used side by side to project wider content into a seamless wide
image, Edge Blending technology can be used. Edge blending can be done in the projector or with an external video processor. Edge blending works to remove the bright visible band that occurs when two images overlap. Edge blending will gradually fade out one of the images in the banded zone while the adjacent image is gradually faded up.
Edge Enhancement
A technique used to increase apparent resolution by increasing contrast around object edges. Usually counterproductive with already high-resolution sources and can become a source of image distortion.
EMI Electro-Magnetic Interference.
Fill Rate Given as a percentage, this characteristic indicates how smooth an image will look viewing a
particular display. An imaging system with a low fill rate will exhibit a screen door pattern in its images.
Focal Length The distance from the surface of a lens to its focal point.
Foot-Lambert (fL)
Measurement of luminance (brightness) emitted from a surface. One foot-Lambert is equal to one lumen per square foot. The metric equivalent of one foot-Lambert is 3.426259 nits or cd/m2. The SMPTE standard for theater cinema is 16 fL.
Form Factor A general description of a projector or flat panel's size and shape. For example, a light projector with
a small case can be said to have a small form factor, and would be good for mobile presentation. Similarly, a flat panel that is slim and wall mountable would be considered to have a small form factor.
FPS Frames Per Second.
Frame A frame is one complete video image. When all lines of the video image are delivered sequentially,
it is called progressive video. When the odd lines and even lines are delivered as separate fields, it is called interlace video.
Frame Interpolation
Frame interpolation, also called motion interpolation, is a video processing technique in which two sequential frames of video are analyzed for motion shifts that occur between Frame A and Frame B. Intermediate frames are then created and inserted between A and B to estimate incremental steps in the movement. The objective is to reduce motion blur and judder in order to achieve a cleaner and more stable video image.
Front Projection A system where the projector sits in front of the screen with the image getting reflected back to the
audience.
Full HD 3D A projector that is Full HD 3D compatible can use any of the 3D formats enabled in the HDMI
1.4 3D specification: frame packing, top/bottom, or side-by-side. These projectors are compatible with the 1080p 3D signal from a Blu-ray player, set-top box, or other HDMI
1.4 device, but may not be
compatible with 120Hz frame sequential 3D from a computer.
Full On/Off Contrast
Contrast is the ratio between white and black. The larger the contrast ratio the greater the ability of a projector or flat panel to show subtle colour details and tolerate extraneous room light. There are two methods used:
1) Full On/Off contrast measures the ratio of the light output of an all white image (full on) and the light output of an all black (full off) image.
2) ANSI contrast is measured with a pattern of 16 alternating black and white rectangles. The average light output from the white rectangles is divided by the average light output of the black rectangles to determine the ANSI contrast ratio. When comparing contrast ratio, make sure you are comparing the same type of contrast. Full On/Off contrast will always be a larger number than ANSI contrast for a given product.
Gamma Relationship between input video voltage and output brightness. Determines how mid-tones appear
as eye sensitivity is non-linear and display devices use different methods to account for this as well as their own display characteristics.
Glossary
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Glossary
Term Description
Gamma Correction
Adjustment to gamma or how gray levels between black and white are displayed as the eye is sensitive to these in a logarithmic manner. For example, good gamma correction allows subtle shadow detail in a dark image to be easily perceived.
Gauge Wire thickness measure. The lower the gauge, the larger the wire.
Geometry Characteristic of a display to accurately show an image without distorting it. When a display’s
geometry is good, it represents square objects as a square, etc. See pincushioning and barrel distortion.
Geometry Correction
Geometry Correction (sometimes referred to as Image Warping) is the process of digitally distorting a projected image so that it precisely matches a specific projection surface or shape. Image geometry correction compensates for the distortion created by off-axis projector or screen placement or non­flat screen surface, by applying a pre-compensating inverse distortion to that image in the digital domain.
Ghosting A faint duplicate image, usually offset from primary image. Can be caused by multipath, which is a
delayed, attenuated duplicate signal bounced off an object to an antenna or other interference.
Gray Scale A table of shading devoid of colour, progressing from black to white. The number of discernible gray
levels defines the colour resolution of the display device and is used to evaluate colour acuity and contrast.
HDBaseT
® HDBaseT® is an international standard for the transmission of ultra-high-definition video & audio,
Ethernet, controls, USB and up to 100W of power over a single cable, for up to 100 meters. HDBaseT
®
eliminates cable clutter without compromising performance and high quality. The connector is typically a RJ48 8 pin Ethernet jack.
HDCP HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) is a method for protecting copyrighted digital
content that uses the DVI (Digital Visual Interface) or HDMI
(High-Definition Multimedia Interface, previously known as DVI-CE) by encrypting its transmission between the video source such as a set-top box, DVD player, or computer and the digital display device such as a projector, monitor or television. To view digital HDCP protected content, both the sending and receiving device must support HDCP.
HDMI
HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface) is an uncompressed, all-digital audio/video interface that supports audio/video sources such as a set-top box, DVD player, A/V receiver, and video monitors such as a digital projector or digital television (DTV). HDMI
is backward compatiable with
DVI 1.0 specification and supports HDCP.
HDMI
supports standard, enhanced, or high-definition video, plus multi-channel digital audio, and interactive controls on a single cable. It transmits all ATSC (Advanced Television Systems Committe) HDTV standards and supports 8-channel digital audio. First product releases using HDMI
occurred
in 2003.
HDR High Dynamic Range (HDR) yields higher overall contrast than Standard Dynamic Range (SDR).
Deeper blacks and brighter highlights result in a longer tonal scale that can render detail in shadows and highlights that tends to get lost in SDR. HDR systems generally come with wider colour gamuts for greater potential colour accuracy.
HDTV High-Definition Television. Generic term that indicates a higher resolution format than previous
standards. At present, denotes anything higher than a 480p signal. Most common formats are 720p, 1080i and 1080p.
HDTV capable A television that supports 720p or 1080i or higher resolutions and has a built-in HDTV tuner for off-
air reception of HD signals from a special antenna. To view cable and satellite HDTV programming, a cable set-top-box or satellite receiver is required.
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HDTV ready A television that supports 720p or 1080i or higher resolutions and does not have a built-in HDTV
tuner for off-air reception of HD signals from a special antenna. To view cable and satellite HDTV programming, a cable set-top-box or satellite receiver is required.
Horizontal Lens Shift
The purpose of Lens Shift is to eliminate keystoning and provide greater flexibility in the placement of the projector relative to the screen. Lens shift may be a manual adjustment or motorized. Horizontal lens shift typically allows the projector to be placed anywhere between right and left edge of the projection screen and may also be used to geometrically align images when stacking projectors. Vertical lens shift is also available on some projectors.
Horizontal Resolution
Amount of pixels across an image, from left to right. A 1920 x 1080 HDTV has a horizontal resolution of 1920 pixels.
Horizontal Scan Rate
Period of time it takes to refresh an image on a screen, usually measured in Hertz (cycles per second). Computer monitors typically have scan rates starting at 60Hz going to 85Hz.
Hue Hue or tint is the parameter of colour that allows us to distinguish between colours.
Hz Hertz. Also called cycles per second and in video displays is the rate at which an image is refreshed.
IEEE 1394 Also called FireWire or iLink. A serial bus which can address up to 63 devices, communicating at
up to 400Mbps but is limited to a cable length of 4.5 meters. Its content copy protection scheme is called DTCP or 5C. Most DV camcorders have a IEEE 1394 port as well as D-VHS VCRs and some set-top boxes for cable and satellite.
Infra-red Remote
An infra-red (IR) remote control transmits in the spectrum of infra-red light, such as a television remote. Unlike RF remotes, IR remotes must point at the receiver (line of sight) or reflect the IR from the screen to the receiver.
Most projectors have an IR sensor in both the front and rear of the projector, whereas, flatpanels generally have a single IR sensor in the front of the unit. When working at or near the maximum distance, pointing right at the receiver will give better results.
Input Lag Input lag is the delay between your video source sending a frame to your projector and the projector
actually displaying that frame. This is a very important aspect of gaming, where an input lag of 40ms or less is preferred.
Interactive Projector
Interactive projectors became popular in 2010 and come in many variations. This technology encompasses any solution that enables active participation by the user with the projected content, rather than just the passive viewing of content.
Typically the presenter is allowed to interact with either the projected image, the projector, or in some cases another device, using either an electronic pen, a mechanical pen or even a finger. These Interactive Projectors essentially create an electronic whiteboard on any surface where the image is projected allowing the presenter to interact with the projected image using a stylus that may be electronic or mechanical.
Some interactive projectors allow user generated information to be captured and replayed, printed, or copied with or without the original projected image.
Interlaced A process where a video image is delivered in two fields each containing half the video image rather
than a single frame that contains the entire image. The first field contains all the odd lines and the second field contains all the even lines. For example, each 480i frame is made up of two fields of 263 and 262 lines of resolution and updated at 60Hz. 480 denotes the active picture area; however, the total frame size is actually 525 lines. 480i and 1080i are interlaced signals whereas 720p is a progressive signal where each video image is delivered in a single frame. Interlaced video was introduced with the first televisions because of bandwidth limitations.
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Invert Image Invert image flips the image from top to bottom, to compensate for ceiling mounting a projector
upside down. Projectors typically ceiling-mount upside down, because most have a built-in offset that allows you to mount the screen at a comfortable height, yet still project an image without tilting the projector and causing keystone distortion.
ISF Imaging Science Foundation. Organization that trains and accredits display calibration technicians
as well as certifies display hardware. Designs standard testing and calibration procedures and tools.
Jaggy The stair-step or sawtooth effect seen on lines that are not horizontal or vertical or the edge of
objects in digital displays. Also known as aliasing. Smoothing and antialiasing techniques can reduce the effect of aliasing.
Jitter Abrupt variations in signal amplitude or timing that cause reproduction instability in audio, video and
data. Usually caused by bandwidth limitations or impedance termination issues that can sometimes be caused by the cable and/or connections you are using. Power supplies can also be a source of this problem.
JPEG Joint Photographic Experts Group. Name of association that created the image file standard of the
same name. A lossy compression scheme for storing high quality, full-colour images. Also used as a video format under the guise M-JPEG of which a variant is used for DV video.
Judder Apparent stutter of on-screen movement. Motion judder in film is due to the fact that the 24
frame/second sampling rate is too slow to resolve camera panning motion. Judder is also caused by 3:2 pulldown where movie frames are on screen for differing times due to frame rate translations. Also occurs on PAL to NTSC conversions.
Kensington Lock
A security device found on projectors and other electronic equipment that allows the equipment to be secured by key or combination to another object using a rubberized cable.
Keystone Keystoning occurs when the projector is not perpendicular to the screen, thereby creating an image
that is not rectangular.
Keystone Correction
Keystone correction makes a projected image rectangular. This can be accomplished by positioning the projector to be perpendicular to the screen. Since this is not always possible, most projectors are equipped with keystone correction that allows the image to be keystone corrected (made rectangular) by adjusting optics, making mechanical adjustments, or applying digital scaling to the image. Keystone correction can be one or two dimensional and manual or automatic depending on the projector and the manufacturer. Be aware that digital scaling will introduce some artifacts that are more evident when viewing small text and less evident in presentation type material or video.
Latency The time between a device being requested to do something and the start of the device actually
doing it. It’s a measurement usually used for LCDs where the shorter the latency the better. NSTC requires a latency of no more than 16ms in order to update the screen in time without leaving a ghost of the previous image.
LCD Liquid Crystal Display. A display device for generating colour images using a matrix of LCD pixel
elements. Each pixel element consists of 3 sub-pixels and an RGB colour filter of red (R), green (G), and blue (B). By controlling the voltage to each sub-pixel of an LCD, each cluster of RGB pixels can create a full spectrum of coloured light. LCDs are used in flatscreen displays, cameras and notebook computers to name a few. Nearly every projector made with LCD technology uses 3 separate LCDs, one each for red, green and blue. Light from the projector lamp is separated into RGB with a set of dichroic mirrors. The three light beams (RGB) are passed through separate LCDs and recombined to project a colour image.
LCoS Liquid Crystal on Silicon. Type of LCD panel that reflects light as opposed to blocking it. Usually
offers a comparatively high fill rate creating a smooth image but generally has difficulty giving a high contrast ratio.
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LED Light Emitting Diode. A light generating technology that uses a semiconductor diode that emits
monochromatic (single colour) light when charged. LEDs are used in remote controls that are used to control electronic devices such as large displays. They are also used in pocket projectors as a light source, large outdoor electonic displays, and as indicators on electoronic devices such as power supplies and cameras.
LED Lamp A type of projector lamp that uses one or more LEDs as its light source. The benefit of LED lamps is
their long life.
Lens Memory The ability to define and recall specific zoom lens positions so the projector can automatically
configure subject matter of a given aspect ratio to a particular screen. This requires a projector with a powered zoom lens. Lens memory is often used to automatically set a zoom lens to fill a 2.4:1 format screen when displaying a 2.4 format film, then reset the lens to allow 16:9 aspect ratio material to fit the vertical height of the screen. Lens memory is typically used as a substitute for an anamorphic lens.
Lens Shift The purpose of "lens shift" is to eliminate keystone correction and provide greater flexibility in
the placement of the projector relative to the screen or the alignment of stacked projectors. This is accomplished by allowing the optical lens to be physically shifted vertically and/or horizontally. These adjustments may be manual or motorized depending on the projector. Seehorizontal lens shiftandvertical lens shiftfor typical adjustment ranges.
Letterbox A method of preserving the originally aspect ratio of a production when presented on a projector
with a different aspect ratio. This is accomplished by showing the full image and black where no image exists.
Linearity A display’s ability to show an image’s geometric characteristics accurately. Also called geometric
linearity.
Long Throw Lens
A long throw lens allows greater distance between the projector and the screen while being able to maintain the image size and brightness of a shorter throw lens for any given projector. Depending on the room, a long throw lens may be required due to mounting constraints nearer the projected image.
Lumen A measurement unit of total illumination. Typically a 100-watt light bulb outputs 1700 lumens over
a wide area. Projector light output is measured in ANSI lumens. A projector with a higher lumen number will produce a brighter image for a given image size. See ANSI Lumens
Luminance The black and white part of a video signal. It is signified by the letter Y. Signals with a separated
luminance and colour signal avoid interference. This interference can result in dot crawl among other image artifacts.
Lux A standard for measuring light equal to the amount of visible light per square meter incident on a
surface. 1 lux = 1 lumen/square meter or 0.093 foot-candles.
M1-DA A DVI connector that supports analog, digital video, a USB connection, and FireWire (IEEE1394).
Used primarily with InFocus projectors. M1-DA (EVC or P&D) is 3 rows or 10 pins and looks a lot like the DVI-I except for 6 more pins. The maximum video resolution supported is 1280x1024. Maximum Distance Sometimes used to refer to the distance from the screen that a projector can focus the image. Most of the time, it is the manufacturer's opinion of how far from a screen the projector can be to cast an image that is useable (bright enough) in a fully darkened room. Consult the Projection Calculator for guidance on proper placement of a projector for a given screen and content.
Maximum Image Size
The largest image a projector can reasonable throw in a darkened room. Consult the Projection Calculator for guidance on proper placement of a projector for a given screen and content.
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Maximum Resolution
Maximum Resolution refers to the highest resolution that a given display device can support. If the Maximum Resolution exceeds the Native Resolution, the image is usually scaled to match or approximate the Native Resolution of the projector. Some display devices allow pan and scan where rather than scaling the image, the display devices allows you to use the native resolution of the display to view portions of the higher resolution image. Scaling reduces the image resolution and produces some artifacts in the image that are more apparent when viewing text than graphics or video.
Memory Card A feature on some projectors that allows photos, documents and/or presentation material to be
projected using a memory card and thereby eliminating the need of a computer.
MHL (Mobile High-Definition Link)
Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL) is an industry standard for a mobile audio/video interface that lets you connect mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets to projectors and other HD video displays. MHL is a consortium made up of major companies in the consumer electronics industry, including SONY, Nokia, Samsung, Silicon Image, and Toshiba.
MHz Megahertz. One million hertz or cycles per second.
Minimum Distance
The closest position that a projector can focus an image onto a screen.
Monitor Loopthrough
An output on the projector or large-screen monitor that allows you to connect additional monitors or projectors to display the same image. Also known as "RGB out" or "VGA out."
Mono Single channel sound.
Motion Artifacts Any artifact caused by camera panning or object movement within video. Judder and combing are
motion artifacts.
MPEG Moving Picture Experts Group. A working group of ISO/IEC in charge of developing codecs and
standards for moving pictures with synchronized audio.
Multi-Lamp Some projectors use multiple lamps that can be controlled by the user to increase or decrease the
brightness of the image. This lamp redundancy significantly minimizes the risk of total lamp failure during use. Another type of multi-lamp system is a Dual Lamp. With a dual lamp projector one lamp can serve as a backup to the other lamp in the event of failure or the lamps can be programmed to switch at specific intervals.
Native Aspect Ratio
Nearly every projector or display today will support multiple aspect ratios; however, each manufacturer must decide who their intended audience is and optimize the projector for that audience. This means each device has a native aspect ratio that is optimized for specific viewing material. Images shown in native aspect ratio will utilize the entire resolution of the display and achieve maximum brightness. Images shown in other than native aspect ratio will always have less resolution and less brightness than images shown in native aspect ratio.
Native Resolution
Native Resolution is the number of physical pixels in a display device. For example, an XGA display has a native resolution of 1024 physical pixels of resolution horizontally and 768 pixels vertically or 786,432 total pixels. See Maximum Resolution.
Negative Gain Screen
A screen with a gain rating of under 1 which actually reduces the amount of light reflected back from a projected image. Usually gray, they are used to increase apparent contrast by lowering the black level.
Noise An unwanted random signal.
NSH New Super High pressure projector lamp is a short arc metal halide lamp.
NTSC National Television Standards Committee. Established the first colour TV standard in 1953 and is
the North American standard for video and broadcasting. Also used in the Caribbean, South Korea, Japan and South America. A 30 fps signal with 525 lines of resolution of which 480 to 483 are viewable. Transmitted via a 6MHz channel.
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OEM Original Equipment Manufacturer. A company that gathers components from other manufacturers
and sells under their own name. An OEM version of a product is supported by the seller, not the actual manufacturer.
Ohm Measure of electrical resistance, inductance or reactance.
OLED Organic Light Emitting Diode. A self-illuminating, energy-efficient, direct-view imaging system. Uses
an organic film sandwiched between 2 transparent electrodes.
Operate 24/7 Projectors that are identified as "Operate 24/7" means that the projector can operate continuously
without a need to shutdown other than for maintenance.
Optical Digital Cable
Transfers digital signals as light pulses. Also called fibre-optic cable and is commonly used to send surround sound from a player to a receiver/decoder.
Optional Lenses
Typically the less expensive projectors come with a built-in lens that is designed to serve a specific type of setting or application. A projector that supports optional lenses can address a wide variety of installation needs. This gives a projector great flexibility at an incremental cost.
OSD On Screen Display. Menu shown on display device screen allowing display adjustment without
having dedicated physical controls such as knobs or buttons for each adjustable parameter.
Oversampling Multiplies outgoing signal samples in order to more easily filter out aliased sounds but doesn’t create
fidelity that isn’t there to begin with.
Overscan Given as a percentage or pixel count, the amount that a particular display device crops the edges of
an incoming video signal. This is done to ensure the image area contains only picture information.
Pan-and-Scan A method to fit source material of a different resolution or aspect ratio onto another. Sometimes
used with computer input when the input resolution exceeds the resolution of the display device. Used extensively for broadcast and DVDs, it simply crops the sides of widescreen material and the transfer operator chooses the best part of the frame to show. Often an electronic camera pan is used to change the area being shown. This is used when characters are talking to each other but one is off screen due to cropping and they become the focus of the shot.
PC 3D Ready A projector that is PC 3D Ready can accept a 120Hz frame-sequential 3D signal from a computer
via either NVIDIA's 3D Vision system or one of several educational software suites. These projectors are not compatible with the HDMI
1.4 3D specification used on 3D Blu-ray players and set-top boxes.
This type of projector is also refered to as 3D Ready.
Persistence of Vision
The disposition of humans to amalgamate sequential still images into perceived motion. For most people, this occurs at around 16 fps.
Phase The characteristic of when a wave is at its peak, trough, or zero point going up or down. Measured in
degrees. Two sine waves of the same frequency that are 180 degrees out of phase will cancel each other out, yielding no signal.
Pico Projector A marketing term to describe a small hand held projector that can fit in your pocket. A pico projector
can be a stand-alone device that connects to a computer or other video device or a projection module that is integrated with a phone, portable computer, MP3 player or other small device.
Picture-in­picture
The ability of a projector (or any video display device) to display two independent video signals at once. One signal usually fills the main screen and the other is displayed in an inset window. Usually the audio from the image on the main screen is the default, and no audio is available on the inset picture.
Poly-Si (silicon) LCD
One of several projector display technologies. Monochrome Poly-Si LCDs are typically placed in each of the three colour (red, green, blue) light paths inside a projector to produce a colour image from a common light source. Poly-Si technology is a bit faster than the Active Matrix TFT providing slightly smoother video.
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Term Description
Power Focus A motor driven lens that adjusts focus using a button on the projector's control panel and/or a remote
control.
Power Output With audio amplifiers, the amount of power sent to drive the speakers. Peak output is quite often
specified, which is somewhat misleading compared to the average amount of power an amplifier can continously produce (RMS rating).
Power Zoom A zoom lens that is driven by a motor and controlled from the projector's control panel and/or remote
control.
Pre-amp A switching device used to select a line-level audio signal for amplification. Sometimes offers signal
processing as well.
Progressive Scan
A display mode in which all the horizontal lines of an image are displayed at one time in a single frame, unlike an interlaced scan in which a frame consists of two separate fields with the first field consisting of odd horizontal lines and the second field even horizontal lines. Progressive scan is used by projectors, computer monitors, HDTV systems, and some digital camcorders. Progressive Scan requires a faster horizontal scan frequency than interlaced images of the same resolution
Projector A projector is a device that integrates a light source, an optics system, electronics and display(s) for
the purpose of projecting an image from a computer or video device onto a wall or screen for large image viewing. These devices attach to a computer or video device as you would connect a monitor or television.
QXGA QXGA is a display resolution of 2048 horizontal pixels by 1536 vertical pixels giving a total display
resolution of 3,145,728 pixels. A QXGA display has 4 times the resolution of an XGA display.
RCA Jacks Unbalanced connection used extensively in consumer electronics to send a line-level signal. Also
called phono.
Refresh Rate The speed at which a display updates its picture given in Hz.
Resolution A measure of the ability of a display or sound system to render detail.
RGB Red, Green and Blue. A component signal representing each colour separately. Sync signals can be
sent on green or sent separately as a composite signal or dual H/V signals (Horizontal sync/Vertical sync). Very common signal for analog computer displays.
RGB out An output on the projector that allows you to connect additional monitors or projectors to display the
same image. Also known as monitor loop-through or VGA out.
RS232 The RS232 port on a projector is typically used to connect an external control device like a wall plate
controller or integrated whole room control system to your projector for turning it on and off remotely or changing the source input. The port is usually a male 9-pin D-sub connector.
S-Video A video transmission standard that uses a 4 pin mini-DIN connector to send video information on two
signal wires called luminance(brightness, Y) and chrominance(colour, C). S-Video is also referred to as Y/C. Considered a higher quality video source than composite video.
S/PDIF Sony/Philips Digital InterFace. A transport protocol related to AES/EBU for sending PCM digital
audio signals between devices. Uses either 75-Ohm coaxial cable or fiber-optic cable.
Sampling Frequency
The speed at which data representations of an analog signal are duplicated. The higher the number, the better the quality. Another quality aspect is the granularity of the scale used for representation where 16 bits allows 65536 discrete levels and 24 bits allows about 17 million.
Saturation
Saturation is a measure of colour intensity. In the absence of saturation the colour hue is a shade of grey. A highly saturated hue has a vivid, intense colour, while a less saturated hue appears more muted and grey.
Scan Rate The line drawing speed of a display, usually given in kHz. A standard definition TV has a scan rate
of 15.75 kHz which when you divide by 525 scan lines, gives a horizontal refresh rate of 30 fps or Hz.
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Screen Gain As it applies to projectors, gain is the measurement of a projection screen’s light reflectance with
unity gain being one. A high gain screen will reflect more light along a narrower path than lower gain screen. Screen gains under one use a gray screen to absorb ambient light to help maintain contrast ratios.
Screen Trigger A 12V connection from a projector to an electric screen which tells the screen to deploy when the
projector is turned on and roll up when the projector is turned off.
SDI Serial Digital Interface (SDI) is a standard for digital video transmission over coaxial cable. The most
common data speed is 270 megabits per second (Mbps). However, speeds of up to 540 Mbps are theoretically possible. A related standard, known as high-definition serial digital interface (HD-SDI) provides a nominal data rate of 1.485 Gbit/s Standard 75-ohm cable is used.
SDTV Standard Definition TeleVision. A class of digital television (DTV) that refers to the 480i format. 480i
is an interlaced video format that produces a full frame of 480 lines of video in two successive fields. The first field includes the odd lines and the second field includes the even lines. Sometimes used to refer to regular television.
SECAM Sequential Couleur avec Mémoire. A television standard closely related to PAL but with a different
method of sending colour information. Runs at 625 horizontal lines of resolution updating 25 frames a second. Used in France and Russia as well as other countries. Many eastern European countries are starting to phase out SECAM in favor of PAL.
Shielded A feature of speakers and cables where a metal layer is added to contain and protect a signal from
creating or receiving electromagnetic interference.
Short Throw Lens
A lens designed to project a large image from a short distance.
Short Throw Projector
A projector with a short throw lens.
Short Throw Wall Mount Projector
A projector that mounts on a wall adjacent to the projection screen. The throw distance is generally just a few inches and allows people to move freely through the room without concern of intercepting the light path.
SHP Super High Pressure. A type of projector lamp.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
The ratio of noise to signal measured in dB. The higher the number, the better.
SPL Sound Pressure Level. Commonly used to describe a speaker’s efficiency at one watt at 1 meter
distance. The actual amount of sound output using dB. There are various weightings used such as A, B or C which reflect the human ear’s sensitivity at different sound levels. A-weighting is used for levels up to 55dB SPL, B-weighting from 55dB SPL to 85dB SPL and C-weighting for 85dB SPL up. A quiet office is 40dB SPL and a rock concert is 110dB SPL.
sRGB sRGB stands for standard Red, Green, and Blue, and is a standard for rendering colour evenly across
a variety of platforms.
Streaking A visual artifact of trailing colours behind an on-screen object or across a screen.
Subpixel On a flat-panel display, one of the primary colour picture elements of which 3 make up a full colour
capable pixel.
SVGA SVGA is a display resolution measuring 800 pixels horizontally by 600 pixels verically giving a total
display resolution of 480,000 individual pixels. SVGA has a 4:3 aspect ratio.
SXGA SXGA is a display resolution measuring 1280 pixels horizontally by 1024 pixels vertically giving a total
display resolution of 1,310,720 individual pixels. SXGA has a 5:4 aspect ratio.
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TCO
Certified
Projectors
A TCO-labelled projector is certified to reproduce excellent images to a maximum projected image size, the TCO
Image Size. In addition, the projector complies with stringent environmental requirements such as low energy consumption and minimal levels of environmentally hazardous substances. There is also an eco mode requirement so the projector can be set to lower luminosities, thus reducing noise, energy consumption and increasing the life of the bulb. The label also requires manufacturers to prove they are working proactively on environmental improvements to the production process and social responsibility issues.
Throw Distance Throw distance is the measurement from the projector's lens to the screen. A projector with a zoom
lens will have a range of throw distances for any given image size, while a projector without a zoom lens will only be able to project one image size at a given distance from the screen. In Projector Central's articles, throw distance is normally quoted for a 100" diagonal screen.
Throw Ratio For any given projector, the width of the image (W) relative to the throw distance (D) is know as the
throw ratio D/W. So for example, one of the most common projector throw ratio is 2.0. This means that for each foot of image width, the projector needs to be 2 feet away or D/W = 2/1 = 2.0.
Tint Television control that varies the colour bias of an incoming video signal. Control needed due to
colour variations in the NTSC signal caused by atmospheric conditions. Does not exist on PAL and SECAM televisions and adjustment should be unnecessary with directly linked video sources.
UHB Ultra High Brightness. A projector lamp type.
UHF Ultra High Frequency. The 300MHz to 3GHz band of radio frequencies used for broadcast television
among other things including Wi-Fi
.
UHP Ultra High Pressure. An acronym attributed to projector lamps with an internal pressure of over 3000
lbs per square inch. Usually a mercury arc lamp. Also stands for Ultra High Performance.
Unbalanced A type of wiring using ground as a shielding method. More susceptible to interference than balanced
wiring.
Uniformity A measurement of the evenness of the brightness of white or a particular colour across a display
indicated as a percentage. A measurement of 80% means the brightness of an image is 20% less at its dimmest point compared to its brightest.
Unity Gain A projection screen with a gain rating of one that reflects light with a wide viewing angle back to the
viewer. See Gain.
Universal Remote
A remote control capable of running multiple components of multiple brands.
Upconvert To convert a lower resolution signal to a higher resolution. For example, 480i to 720p.
UXGA UXGA is a display resolution measuring 1600 pixels horizontally and 1200 pixels vertically giving a
total display resolution of 1,920,000 individual pixels. UXGA has an aspect ratio of 4:3.
VBR Variable Bit Rate. Refers to a variable data rate for encoding MPEG where picture quality is maintained
but data rates change in accordance to the requirements of a video passage. Large amounts of movement and detail require higher data rates. VBR tends to create more space efficient MPEG files where picture quality is maintained but data rates change.
Vertical Lens Shift
The purpose of Lens Shift is to eliminate keystoning and provide greater flexibility in the placement of the projector relative to the screen. Lens shift may be a manual adjustment or motorized depending on the projector. Vertical lens shift will typically allow the projector to be placed anywhere between 1.5 screen heights above or below the center of the projection screen and may also be used to geometrically align images when stacking projectors. Horizontal lens shift is also available on some projectors.
VGA VGA is a display resolution measuring 640 horizontal pixels and 480 vertical pixels giving a total
display resolution of 307,200 individual pixels. VGA has a 4:3 aspect ratio.
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VGA out A 15-pin D-sub output on the projector that allows you to connect additional monitors or projectors
to display the same image. Also known as monitor loop-through or RGB out.
Video Mirroring An output connector on the projector that allows a monitor or another projector to share the same
video source.
Volt A measurement of electrical pressure.
Watt A unit of power. Volts multiplied by amperage equals watts.
White Level The signal level that corresponds to the maximum picture brightness. The white level is set by the
contrast control.
Wi-Fi
Wi-Fi is Wireless Fidelity, and is a type of wireless network used to connect digital devices without the need for cables. It is mostly used for wireless broadband access and inexpensive consumer wireless antennas are available at electronics stores.
Widescreen Any aspect ratio that is wider than 4:3. Widescreen televisions are 16 units wide and 9 units tall.
Common widescreen film aspect ratios are 1.66:1, 1.85:1 and 2:35:1.
WMA Windows Media Audio. Similar to MP3 but considered a more efficient compressor allowing for
smaller file sizes for a given quality.
WSXGA WSXGA defines a class of SXGA displays with a width resolution sufficient to create an aspect ratio
of 16:9. A WSXGA display has 1920 to 1600 pixels horizontally and 1080 to 900 pixels vertically.
WXGA WXGA defines a class of XGA displays with a width resolution sufficient to create an aspect ratio of
16:9. A WXGA display has 1366 to 1280 pixels horizontally and 768 to 720 pixels vertically.
XGA XGA is a display resolution measuring 1024 pixels horizontally and 768 pixels vertically giving a total
display resolution of 786,432 individual pixels. XGA has a 4:3 aspect ratio.
XLR Balanced connection for audio components and used professionally.
XviD A free and open source MPEG-4 video codec that was created by a group of volunteer programmers
trying to overcome the closed source and platform limitations of DivX (XviD spelled backwards).
Y/ C Denotes a separated luminance/chrominance signal. Also called S-video. Offers higher resolutions
and no cross interference between colour and black and white (luminance) signals which shows itself as dot crawl.
Y/Cb/Cr Digital component video. Y stands for the luma signal itself and Cb is the blue signal subtracted from
luma and finally, Cr equals the red signal subtracted from the luma signal.
Y/ P b / P r Analog component video. Y stands for the luma signal itself and Pb is the blue signal subtracted from
luma and finally, Pr equals the red signal subtracted from the luma signal.
Zoom Lens A lens with a variable focal length providing the ability to adjust the size of a projected image without
moving the projector or provide a range of projector placements that can produce the same size image. See Zoom Ratio.
Zoom Ratio Zoom ratio is the ratio between the smallest and largest image a lens can projector from a fixed
distance. For example, a 1.4:1 zoom lens ratio means that a 10 foot image without zoom would be a 14 foot image with full zoom. Conversely, a 10 foot diagonal image at 15 feet with no zoom would still be a 10 image at 21 feet at maximum zoom (15 x 1.4 = 21 feet). A zoom lens is "not as bright" as a fixed lens, and the higher the ratio, the less light output.
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Getting help
Getting help and contacting InFocus
S
elf help resources
The projector has a number of built-in help topic menus that allow you to navigate through the steps to resolve most standard issues. Details of each of these screens and the topics they address are detailed below. The help menu can be accessed by pressing the “HELP” button on the  avigate through the menus and topics by following the onscreen instructions.
Please also refer to the more detailed Q&A section of the product users guide.
1. Image quality troubleshooting
1a. Image slanted
Getting help
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68 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Getting help
1b. Image size adjustment
1c. Image stability
1d. Audio troubleshooting
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infocus.com
Getting help
2b. No image on screen
2a. No image on screen
2. No image troubleshooting
Getting help
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70 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Contacting InFocus
InFocus technical support can be contacted at the below phone numbers within the stated operating hours, by using the enquiry form links provided or by visiting infocus.com and clicking on the chat support icon found on every page.
US & Canada
Mon-Fri | 6:00am - 5:00pm PST
Europe, Middle-East & Africa
Mon-Fri | 08:00 - 17:00 CET
United States
877-388-8360
Canada
877-388-8360
Austria
0800 4636287
France
0800 905993
Germany
0800 1813649
Italy
0800 877238
Sweden
020 791251
Spain
0900 993163
Switzerland
0800 04636287
UK & Northern Ireland
0800 0286470
European Union
+8000 463 6287
Technical support enquiry
Technical Support Enquiry
Getting help
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Getting help
Asia-Pacific region
Mon-Fri | 08:00 - 17:00 Local Time
Australia
1300-577-321
India
044-22252042
044-42015277/89
Malaysia
+607-3535133
+603-80708889
New Zealand
008000 463-6287
Singapore
+65 93387857
Technical support enquiry
Getting help
Portland. Oregon Home of InFocus Corporation
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72 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Regional & country specific notices
Disposing of your used product
In the European Union
EU-wide legislation as implemented in each Member State requires that used electrical and electronic products carrying the mark (below) must be disposed of separately from normal household waste. This includes projectors and their electrical accessories. When you dispose of such products, please follow the guidance of your local authority and/or ask the shop where you purchased the product.
After collecting the used products, they are reused and recycled in a proper way. This effort will help us reduce the waste as well as the negative impact to the human health and the environment at the minimum level.
The mark on the electrical and electronic products only applies to the current European Union Member States.
The crossed-out wheeled bin implies that used batteries should not be put to the general household waste!
There is a separate collection system for used batteries, to allow proper treatment and recycling in accordance with legislation.
According the EU directive 2006/66/EC, the batteries can’t be disposed improperly. The battery shall be separated to collect by local service.
Outside the European Union
If you wish to dispose of used electrical and electronic products outside the European union, please contact your local authority and ask for the correct method of disposal.
Californian residence
WARNING TO CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS:
Handling the cables supplied with this product will expose you to lead, a chemical known to the State of California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm.
WASH HANDS AFTER HANDLING.
Notices
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Notices
RF interference (for USA only)
Warning
The Federal Communications Commission does not allow any modifications or changes to the unit EXCEPT those specified by InFocus Corporation in this manual. Failure to comply with this government regulation could void your right to operate this equipment. This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio fre­quency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation.
If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
 Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.  Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.  Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. •
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio / TV technician for help.
Turkish RoHS information relevant for Turkish market
EEE Yonetmeliğine Uygundur.
This device is not intended for use in the direct field of view at visual display workplaces. To avoid incommoding reflections at visual display workplaces this device must not be placed in the direct field of view.
Lamps
US Residents
The lamp in this product contains mercury. Please dispose according to Local, State or Federal Laws.
Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999
The lamp(s) in this product contains mercury. Please dispose according to your local authority law. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT InFocus Corporation infocus.com
Notices
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74 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Warning
 Do not cover the lens with the lens cap or equivalent while the projector is on. Doing so can lead to melting
of the cap due to the heat emitted from the light output.
 Do not place any objects, which are easily affected by heat, in front of the projection window. Doing so could
lead to the object melting from the heat that is emitted from the light output.
 Do not use a spray containing flammable gas to get rid of accumulated dust and dirt on the filters and the
projection window. It may cause of fire.
 Do not look at the lens while the projector is on. Serious damage to your eyes could result.
RG 2
Manufacturer and EU importer in accordance with EU directives
Manufacturer: InFocus Corporation
13190 SW 68th Parkway, Suite 120 Portland, Oregon 97223 United States
EU Importer: InFocus International B.V.
Kingsfordweg 103 1043 GP Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Compliance statements for acoustic noise
Machine Noise Information Regulation - 3. GPSGV,
The highest sound pressure level is less than 70 dB (A) in accordance with EN ISO 7779.
Notices
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Notices
FCC compliance statement
TRADE NAME: DLP Projector
MODEL NUMBER: IN112AA; IN119AA; IN112BB; IN114BB; IN113AA; IN114AA; IN115AA; V11;
IN116AA; IN117AA; V13; IN118AA; IN188AA; IN199AA; IN113BB; IN115BB; IN116BB; IN117BB; IN118BB; IN188BB; IN119BB; IN199BB; IN114BBST; IN115BBST; V31; IN116BBST; IN117BBST; IN118BBST; IN188BBST; P130; P131; P132
COMPLIANCE TEST REPORT NUMBER: ISL-20LE411FB
COMPLIANCE TEST REPORT DATE: June 10, 2020
RESPONSIBLE PARTY (IN USA): InFocus Corporation
ADDRESS: 13190 SW 68th Parkway, Suite 120
Portland, Oregon 97223 United States
TELEPHONE: +1 503 2074700
This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules as documented in the above referenced test report. These limits are designed to provide reason­able protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harm­ful interference to radio communications.
This equipment referenced in this declaration is identical to the unit tested and found acceptable with the stan­dards. The technical records maintained by the responsible party continue to reflect the equipment being pro­duced under this Declaration of Conformity within the variation that can be expected due to quantity production and testing on a statistical basis.
Date: October 1, 2020 InFocus Corporation
Notices
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76 InFocus Corporation — Introduction Guide - DLP Multimedia Projector
Restriction of use
When this product is used for applications requiring high reliability/safety, such as transportation devices related to aviation, rail, marine, automotive, disaster prevention devices; various safety devices, or functional/precision de­vices, you should use this product only after giving consideration to including fail-safes and redundancies into your design to maintain safety and total system reliability. Because this product was not intended for use in applications requiring extremely high reliability/safety, such as aerospace equipment, main communication equipment, nuclear power control equipment, or medical equipment related to direct medical care, etc., please make your own judg­ment on this product’s suitability after a full evaluation.
Copyright notice
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of InFocus Corporation. The information contained herein is designed only for use with the InFocus products listed. InFocus is not responsible for any use of this information as applied to other products.
Neither InFocus Corporation nor its affiliates shall be liable to the purchaser of this product or third parties for damages, losses, costs, or expenses incurred by purchaser or third parties as a result of: accident, misuse, or abuse of this product or unauthorized modifications, repairs, or alterations to this product, or (excluding the U.S.) failure to strictly comply with InFocus Corporation's operating and maintenance instructions.
InFocus Corporation shall not be liable for any damages or problems arising from the use of any options or any consumable products other than those designated as Original InFocus Products or InFocus Approved Products by InFocus Corporation.
InFocus Corporation shall not be held liable for any damage resulting from electromagnetic interference that occurs from the use of any interface cables other than those designated as InFocus approved Products by InFocus Corporation.
Copyright attribution
Information is subject to change without notice.
2020 InFocus Corporation
Document No. 10000001 -EN
Notices
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1
Model Name Notes
RS232 Setting
IN112AA
IN114AA/V11
IN116AA/V13
IN118AA
IN119AA
(w/o RS232)
IN112BB
IN114BB
IN114BBST/V31
IN118BB
IN118BBST
IN116BB
IN116BBST
IN119BB
IN188DD
ASCII Code HEX Code
~XX00 1 7E 30 30 30 30 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX00 0 7E 30 30 30 30 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S002 ~XX00 1 ~nnnn 7E 30 30 30 30 20 31 20 a 0D
Power ON with Password
~nnnn
nnnn = Password
~0000 ( a=7E 30 30 30 30)
~9999 (a=7E 39 39 39 39)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S003 ~XX01 1 7E 30 30 30 31 20 31 0D Resync No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX02 1 7E 30 30 30 32 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX02 0 7E 30 30 30 32 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX03 1 7E 30 30 30 33 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX03 0 7E 30 30 30 33 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX04 1 7E 30 30 30 34 20 31 0D
Freeze No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX04 0 7E 30 30 30 34 20 30 0D
Unfreeze
(0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S007 ~XX05 1 7E 30 30 30 35 20 31 0D Zoom Plus No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
S008 ~XX06 1 7E 30 30 30 36 20 31 0D Zoom Minus No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX11 0 7E 30 30 31 31 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX11 1 7E 30 30 31 31 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX12 5 7E 30 30 31 32 20 35 0D
VGA No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX12 9 7E 30 30 31 32 20 39 0D
S-Video No Yes Yes Ye s No
~XX12 10 7E 30 30 31 32 20 31 30 0D
Video No No No No Yes
~XX12 1 7E 30 30 31 32 20 31 0D
HDMI (HDMI 1) No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX12 15 7E 30 30 31 32 20 31 35 0D
HDMI 2 No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX20 1 7E 30 30 32 30 20 31 0D
Presentation No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX20 2 7E 30 30 32 30 20 32 0D
Bright No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX20 3 7E 30 30 32 30 20 33 0D
Movie (Cinema) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX20 4 7E 30 30 32 30 20 34 0D
sRGB No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX20 13 7E 30 30 32 30 20 31 33 0D
DICOM SIM. No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX20 5 7E 30 30 32 30 20 35 0D
User No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX20 9 7E 30 30 32 30 20 39 0D
3D No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX20 14 7E 30 30 32 30 20 31 34 0D
ISF Day No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX20 15 7E 30 30 32 30 20 31 35 0D
ISF Night No Yes Yes Yes Yes
S012 ~XX2 1 n 7E 30 30 32 31 20 a 0D Brightness
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S013 ~XX2 2 n 7E 30 30 32 32 20 a 0D Con trast
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S014 ~XX23 n 7E 30 30 32 33 20 a 0D Sharpness n = 1 (a=31) ~ 15 (a=31 35) No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
S015 ~XX2 4 n 7E 30 30 32 34 20 a 0D RGB Gain /Bias Red Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S016 ~XX2 5 n 7E 30 30 32 35 20 a 0D
RGB Gain/Bia s Green
Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S017 ~XX26 n 7E 30 30 32 36 20 a 0D RGB Gain /Bias Blue Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S018 ~XX27 n 7E 30 30 32 37 20 a 0D RGB Gain/Bias Red Bias
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S019 ~XX2 8 n 7E 30 30 32 38 20 a 0D RGB Gain /Bias Gree n Bias
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S020 ~XX29 n 7E 30 30 32 39 20 a 0D RGB Gain/Bias Bl ue Bias
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S021 ~XX3 4 n 7E 30 30 33 34 20 a 0D
BrilliantColor
TM
n = 1 (a=30) ~ 10 (a=31 30) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX35 1 7E 30 30 33 35 20 31 0D
Film No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX35 2 7E 30 30 33 35 20 32 0D
Video No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX35 3 7E 30 30 33 35 20 33 0D
Graphics No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX35 4 7E 30 30 33 35 20 34 0D
Standard (2.2) No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX35 5 7E 30 30 33 35 20 35 0D
1.8 No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX35 6 7E 30 30 33 35 20 36 0D
2.0 No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX35 12 7E 30 30 33 35 20 31 31 0D
2.4 No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX36 1 7E 30 30 33 36 20 34 0D
Warm No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX36 2 7E 30 30 33 36 20 31 0D
Medium No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX36 3 7E 30 30 33 36 20 32 0D
Cold No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX37 1 7E 30 30 33 37 20 31 0D
Auto No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX37 2 7E 30 30 33 37 20 32 0D
RGB\ RGB(0- 255) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX37 3 7E 30 30 33 37 20 33 0D
YUV No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX37 4 7E 30 30 33 37 20 34 0D
RGB(16 — 235) No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
S025 ~XX44 n 7E 30 30 34 35 20 a 0D Tint
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30))
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S026 ~XX45 n 7E 30 30 34 34 20 a 0D Colou r (S aturation )
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX60 1 7E 30 30 36 30 20 31 0D
4:3 No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX60 2 7E 30 30 36 30 20 32 0D
16:9 No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX60 3 7E 30 30 36 30 20 33 0D
16:10 No No No Yes No Only for WXGA/WUXGA
~XX60 5 7E 30 30 36 30 20 35 0D
LBX No No Yes Yes Yes Except for SVGA/XGA
~XX60 6 7E 30 30 36 30 20 36 0D
Native No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX60 7 7E 30 30 36 30 20 37 0D
Auto No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
S028 ~XX61 n 7E 30 30 36 31 20 a 0D Edge mask n = 0 (a=30) ~ 10 (a=31 30) No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
S029 ~XX62 n 7E 30 30 36 32 20 a 0D Zoom
n = -5 (a=2D 35) ~ 25 (a=32
35)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S030 ~XX63 n 7E 30 30 36 33 20 a 0D H Image Sh ift
n = -100 (a=2D 31 30 30) ~
100 (a= 31 30 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S031 ~XX6 4 n 7E 30 30 36 34 20 a 0D V Image Sh ift
n = -100 (a=2D 31 30 30) ~
100 (a= 31 30 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S033 ~XX66 n 7E 30 30 36 36 20 a 0D V Key stone
RT: n = -40 (a=2 D 34 30) ~
40 (a=34 3 0)
ST: n = -20 (a=2D 32 30) ~
20 (a=32 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX70 1 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 0D
English No Yes Ye s Yes Yes Engli sh
~XX70 2 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 0D
Deutsch No Yes Yes Ye s Yes Ge rman
~XX70 3 7E 30 30 37 30 20 33 0D
Français No Yes Yes Yes Yes French
~XX70 4 7E 30 30 37 30 20 34 0D
Italiana No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s Italian
~XX70 5 7E 30 30 37 30 20 35 0D
Español No Yes Yes Yes Ye s Spanish
~XX70 6 7E 30 30 37 30 20 36 0D
Português No Yes Ye s Yes Yes Portugue se
~XX70 7 7E 30 30 37 30 20 37 0D
Polski No Yes Ye s Yes Yes Polish
~XX70 8 7E 30 30 37 30 20 38 0D
Nederlands No Yes Yes Yes Yes Dutch
~XX70 9 7E 30 30 37 30 20 39 0D
Svenska No Yes Yes Yes Yes Swedish
~XX70 10 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 30 0D
Norsk/Dansk No Yes Ye s Yes Yes Norwegian /Danish
~XX70 11 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 31 0D
Suomi No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s Finnish
~XX70 12 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 32 0D
ελληνικά No Yes Yes Ye s Yes Gree k
~XX70 14 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 34 0D
簡体中文 No Yes Yes Yes Ye s Simplified Chinese
~XX70 17 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 37 0D
Русский No Yes Yes Yes Ye s Russian
~XX70 18 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 38 0D
Magyar No Yes Yes Yes Ye s Hungarian
~XX70 19 7E 30 30 37 30 20 31 39 0D
Čeština No Yes Ye s Yes Yes Cze choslov ak
~XX70 20 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 30 0D
"
#
$ﺮﻋ
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Arabic
~XX70 21 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 31 0D
ไทย
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Th ai
~XX70 22 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 32 0D
Türkçe No Yes Yes Yes Yes Turkish
Command Set
S024
S027
S035
Index
S001
S004
S005
S006 S009
S010
S022
S023
S011
Function
Power
AV Mute
Mute IR Functi on
Direct Source Commands
Gamma
Colour Temp.
Colour Space
Format (Aspect Ratio)
Language
Picture Mode
Notes
Support (Yes/No)
Value / Range
Baud Rate : 9600; Data Bi ts: 8; Parit y: None; S top Bit s: 1; Flow Con trol: Non e; UART16 550 FIFO: Di sable
Projector Re turn (Pass): P; Proj ector Re turn (Fai l): F
XX= 00-99 (Pojector's ID), XX= 00 is for all projectors
Note :
1. There i s a <CR> after al l ASC II comman ds
2. 0D is the HEX code for <CR> in ASCII code
SEND to Projector
Page 80
RS232 Commands
2
Model Name Notes
RS232 Setting
IN112AA
IN114AA/V11
IN116AA/V13
IN118AA
IN119AA
(w/o RS232)
IN112BB
IN114BB
IN114BBST/V31
IN118BB
IN118BBST
IN116BB
IN116BBST
IN119BB
IN188DD
Baud Rate : 9600; Data Bi ts: 8; Parit y: None; S top Bit s: 1; Flow Con trol: Non e; UART16 550 FIFO: Di sable
Projector Re turn (Pass): P; Proj ector Re turn (Fai l): F
XX= 00-99 (Pojector's ID), XX= 00 is for all projectors
Note :
1. There i s a <CR> after al l ASC II comman ds
2. 0D is the HEX code for <CR> in ASCII code
~XX70 23 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 33 0D
'رﺎ ﻓ
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Farsi
~XX70 24 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 34 0D !"#$%
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Hi ndi
~XX70 25 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 35 0D Tiếng Việt
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Vi etnamese
~XX70 26 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 36 0D Bahasa In donesia
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes In donesia n
~XX70 27 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 37 0D Român ă
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Ro manian
~XX70 29 7E 30 30 37 30 20 32 39 0D Pilipino
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Filipino
~XX70 30 7E 30 30 37 30 20 33 30 0D Melayu
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Malay
~XX70 31 7E 30 30 37 30 20 33 31 0D !"#$"
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes Be ngali
~XX71 1 7E 30 30 37 31 20 31 0D
Front No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX71 2 7E 30 30 37 31 20 32 0D
Rear No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX71 3 7E 30 30 37 31 20 33 0D
Front-Ceiling No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX71 4 7E 30 30 37 31 20 34 0D
Rear-Ceilin g No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX72 1 7E 30 30 37 32 20 31 0D
Top Left No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX72 2 7E 30 30 37 32 20 32 0D
Top Right No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX72 3 7E 30 30 37 32 20 33 0D
Centre No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX72 4 7E 30 30 37 32 20 34 0D
Bottom Left No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX72 5 7E 30 30 37 32 20 35 0D
Bottom Right No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
S038 ~XX73 n 7E 30 30 37 33 20 a 0D Signal Freque ncy
n = -5 (a=2D 35) ~ 5 (a=35)
By signal
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S039 ~XX74 n 7E 30 30 37 34 20 a 0D Signal Phase
n = 0 (a=30) ~ 63 (a=36 33)
By signal
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S040 ~XX75 n 7E 30 30 37 35 20 a 0D Signal H. Position
n = -5 (a=2D 35) ~ 5 (a=35)
By timing
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S041 ~XX76 n 7E 30 30 37 36 20 a 0D Signal V. Position
n = -5 (a=2D 35) ~ 5 (a=35)
By timing
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S042 ~XX77 n 7E 30 30 37 37 20 aabbcc 0D
Security Security Timer
Month/Day/Hour
n = mm/dd/hh
mm= 00 (aa=30 30) ~ 12
(aa=31 32)
dd = 00 (bb=3 0 30) ~ 3 0
(bb=33 30)
hh= 00 (cc=30 30) ~ 24
(cc=32 34)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX78 1 ~nn nn 7E 30 30 37 38 20 31 0D
On with passwo rd
~nnnn = ~0000 (a= 7E 3 0 30
30 30)
~9999 (a=7E 39 39 39 39)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX78 0 ~n nnn 7E 30 30 37 38 20 32 20 a 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible) with password
~nnnn = ~0000 (a= 7E 3 0 30
30 30)
~9999 (a=7E 39 39 39 39)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S044 ~XX79 n 7E 30 30 37 39 20 a 0D Proje ctor ID
n = 00 (a=30 30) ~ 99 (a=39
39)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX80 1 7E 30 30 38 30 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX80 0 7E 30 30 38 30 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S046 ~XX81 n 7E 30 30 38 31 20 a 0D Volume (Audio ) n = 0 (a=30) ~ 10 (a=31 30) No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX90 1 7E 30 30 39 31 20 31 0D
16:10 No No No Yes No
~XX90 0 7E 30 30 39 31 20 30 0D
16:9 No No No Yes No
~XX91 1 7E 30 30 39 31 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX91 0 7E 30 30 39 31 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX101 1 7E 30 30 31 30 31 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX101 0 7E 30 30 31 30 31 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX102 1 7E 30 30 31 30 32 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX102 0 7E 30 30 31 30 32 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX103 1 7E 30 30 31 30 33 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX103 0 7E 30 30 31 30 33 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX104 0 7E 30 30 31 30 34 20 30 0D
None No No No No No
~XX104 1 7E 30 30 31 30 34 20 31 0D
Blue No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX104 2
Black No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX104 3 7E 30 30 31 30 34 20 33 0D
Red No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX104 4 7E 30 30 31 30 34 20 34 0D
Green No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX104 5
White No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX104 7 7E 30 30 31 30 34 20 37 0D
Logo No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX105 1 7E 30 30 31 30 35 20 31 0D
On No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX105 0 7E 30 30 31 30 35 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX109 1 7E 30 30 31 30 39 20 31 0D
On No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX109 0 7E 30 30 31 30 39 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX110 1 7E 30 30 31 31 30 20 31 0D
Bright No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX110 2 7E 30 30 31 31 30 20 32 0D
Eco No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX110 4 7E 30 30 31 31 30 20 34 0D
Dynamic No Yes Yes Yes Yes
S057 ~XX111 1 7E 30 30 31 31 31 20 31 0D Lamp Reset Yes No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX113 1 7E 30 30 31 31 33 20 31 0D
On No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX113 0 7E 30 30 31 31 33 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S059 ~XX106 n 7E 30 30 31 30 36 20 a 0D
Auto Power Off (min) “
(5 minutes for each step).”
n = 0 (a=30) ~ 180 (a=31 38
30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S060 ~XX107 n 7E 30 30 31 30 37 20 a 0D
Sleep Timer (min) “
(30 minutes for each
step).”
n = 0 (a=30) ~ 990 (a=39 39
30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S061 ~XX1 12 1 7E 30 30 31 31 32 20 31 0D
Reset to D efault Ye s (P.S
When se curity is off)
Yes with no passw ord
(Security is Off)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S062 ~XX112 1 ~nnnn 7E 30 30 31 31 32 20 31 0D
Reset to D efault Ye s (P.S
When se curity is On/ Off)
Yes with no passw ord
(Security is Off)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX115 1 7E 30 30 31 31 35 20 31 0D
On No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
~XX115 0 7E 30 30 31 31 35 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 10 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 30 0D
Up No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX140 11 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 31 0D
Left No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 12 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 32 0D
Enter (fo r Projection MENU) No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX140 13 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 33 0D
Right No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 14 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 34 0D
Down No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX140 15 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 35 0D
Keystone + No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX140 16 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 36 0D
Keystone – No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX140 17 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 37 0D
Volume – No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX140 18 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 38 0D
Volume + No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX140 19 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 31 39 0D
Brightness No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 20 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 32 30 0D
Menu No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX140 21 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 32 31 0D
Zoom No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 28 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 32 38 0D
Contrast No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX140 47 7E 30 30 31 34 30 20 34 37 0D
Source No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX195 0 7E 30 30 31 39 35 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
S054
S055
S056
S058
S064
S065
S035
S036
S037
S043
S045 S048
S049
IR Functi on
Language
Projection
Menu Location
Security
Mute
Quick Resu me
S050
S051
S052
S053
Lamp Reminder
Brightness Mode
Signal Power On
Screen Type
(Only for WXGA/WUXGA)
Signal Automatic
Only for WXG A/WUXGA
High Altitude
Information Hide
Keypad Lock
Background Color
Direct Power On
Page 81
RS232 Commands
3
Model Name Notes
RS232 Setting
IN112AA
IN114AA/V11
IN116AA/V13
IN118AA
IN119AA
(w/o RS232)
IN112BB
IN114BB
IN114BBST/V31
IN118BB
IN118BBST
IN116BB
IN116BBST
IN119BB
IN188DD
Baud Rate : 9600; Data Bi ts: 8; Parit y: None; S top Bit s: 1; Flow Con trol: Non e; UART16 550 FIFO: Di sable
Projector Re turn (Pass): P; Proj ector Re turn (Fai l): F
XX= 00-99 (Pojector's ID), XX= 00 is for all projectors
Note :
1. There i s a <CR> after al l ASC II comman ds
2. 0D is the HEX code for <CR> in ASCII code
~XX195 1 7E 30 30 31 39 35 20 31 0D
Grid (Red) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX195 2 7E 30 30 31 39 35 20 32 0D
White No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX195 3 7E 30 30 31 39 35 20 33 0D
Grid (Green) No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX195 4 7E 30 30 31 39 35 20 34 0D
Grid (Blue) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
S067 ~XX200 n 7E 30 30 32 30 30 20 a 0D White level n = 0 (a=30) ~ 31 (a=33 31) No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
S068 ~XX201 n 7E 30 30 32 30 31 20 a 0D Black level n = -5 (a=2D 35) ~ 5 (a=35) No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX204 1 7E 30 30 32 30 34 20 31 0D
0 No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX204 0 7E 30 30 32 30 34 20 30 0D
7.5 No Yes Yes Yes Yes
S070 ~XX210 n 7E 30 30 32 30 30 20 n 0D
Display message on the
OSD
n: 1-30 characters No No No No No
S071 ~XX215 1 7E 30 30 32 31 35 20 31 0D Colour S etting Reset No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX230 0 7E 30 30 32 33 30 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX230 1 7E 30 30 32 33 30 20 31 0D
DLP-Link No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX231 0 7E 30 30 32 33 31 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX231 1 7E 30 30 32 33 31 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX313 1 7E 30 30 33 31 33 20 31 0D
On
No No No No No
~XX313 0 7E 30 30 33 31 33 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No No No No No
~XX320 1 7E 30 30 33 32 30 20 31 0D
Yes No No No No No
~XX320 0 7E 30 30 33 32 30 20 30 0D
No (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No No No No No
~XX322 0 7E 30 30 33 32 32 20 30 0D
Off No No No No No
~XX322 1 7E 30 30 33 32 32 20 31 0D
300hr No No No No No
~XX322 2 7E 30 30 33 32 32 20 32 0D
500hr No No No No No
~XX322 3 7E 30 30 33 32 32 20 33 0D
800hr No No No No No
~XX322 4 7E 30 30 33 32 32 20 34 0D
1000hr No No No No No
S077 ~XX323 1 7E 30 30 33 32 33 20 31 0D Filter Reset Yes No No No No No
S078 ~XX327 n 7E 30 30 33 32 37 20 a 0D Colour Settin g Red H ue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S079 ~XX328 n 7E 30 30 33 32 38 20 a 0D Colour S etting Green Hue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S080 ~XX329 n 7E 30 30 33 32 39 20 a 0D Colo ur Se tting Bl ue Hu e
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S081 ~XX330 n 7E 30 30 33 33 30 20 a 0D Co lour S etting Cyan Hue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S082 ~XX331 n 7E 30 30 33 33 31 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Yellow Hue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S083 ~XX332 n 7E 30 30 33 33 32 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Magen ta
Hue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S084 ~XX333 n 7E 30 30 33 33 33 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Red
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S085 ~XX334 n 7E 30 30 33 33 34 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Green
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S086 ~XX335 n 7E 30 30 33 33 35 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Blue
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S087 ~XX336 n 7E 30 30 33 33 36 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Cyan
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S088 ~XX337 n 7E 30 30 33 33 37 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Yellow
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S089 ~XX338 n 7E 30 30 33 33 38 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Magen ta
Stutation
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S090 ~XX339 n 7E 30 30 33 33 39 20 a 0D Colou r Settin g Red Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S091 ~XX3 40 n 7E 30 30 33 34 30 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Green
Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S092 ~XX341 n 7E 30 30 33 34 31 20 a 0D Colour Settin g Blu e Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S093 ~XX342 n 7E 30 30 33 34 32 20 a 0D Colour S etting Cyan G ain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S094 ~XX343 n 7E 30 30 33 34 33 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Yellow
Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S095 ~XX344 n 7E 30 30 33 34 34 20 a 0D
Colour Setting Magen ta
Gain
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S096 ~XX345 n 7E 30 30 33 34 35 20 a 0D Colo ur Se tting Wh ite Re d
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S097 ~XX346 n 7E 30 30 33 34 36 20 a 0D
Colour Setting White
Green
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
S098 ~XX347 n 7E 30 30 33 34 37 20 a 0D Colou r Settin g White Blue
n = -50 (a=2D 35 30) ~ 50
(a=35 30)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX348 1 7E 30 30 33 34 38 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
~XX348 0 7E 30 30 33 34 38 20 30 0D
Off No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX400 0 7E 30 30 34 30 30 20 30 0D
3D No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
~XX400 1 7E 30 30 34 30 30 20 31 0D
L No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX400 2 7E 30 30 34 30 30 20 32 0D
R No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX405 0 7E 30 30 34 30 35 20 30 0D
Auto No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX405 1 7E 30 30 34 30 35 20 31 0D
SBS No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX405 2 7E 30 30 34 30 35 20 32 0D
Top and Bottom No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX405 3 7E 30 30 34 30 35 20 33 0D
Frame Sequential No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX506 0 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 30 0D
Whiteboard No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX506 1 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 31 0D
Blackboard No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX506 2 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 32 0D
Light Yellow No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX506 3 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 33 0D
Light Green No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX506 4 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 34 0D
Light Blue No Yes Yes Ye s Yes
~XX506 5 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 35 0D
Pink No Yes Yes Yes Ye s
~XX506 6 7E 30 30 35 30 36 20 36 0D
Gray No Yes Yes Yes Yes
~XX511 0 7E 30 30 35 31 31 20 30 0D
Off (0/2 for backward
compatible)
No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
~XX511 1 7E 30 30 35 31 31 20 31 0D
On No Ye s Yes Yes Yes
ASCII Code HEX Code
A001 N/A N/A
Projector Information
a=0, Standby
a=1, Warming
a=2, Cooling
a=3, Out of Range
a=4, Lamp Fail
a=6, Fan Lock
a=7, Over Temperatu re
a=8, Lamp Hours Runn ing
Out
INFOa No Yes Yes Yes Yes
SEND from Projector Automatically
Command Set
S100
S101
S108
S109
Index
S066
S069
S072
S073
S074
S075
S076
S099
Test Pattern
IRE
3D Mode
3D Sync Invert
3D Format Information Menu
Optional Filte r Installed
Wall Colour
HDMI Link(CEC)
Function
Support (Yes/No)
Notes
Filter Reminder
Display Mode Lock
3D2D
Projector Return
Page 82
RS232 Commands
4
Model Name Notes
RS232 Setting
IN112AA
IN114AA/V11
IN116AA/V13
IN118AA
IN119AA
(w/o RS232)
IN112BB
IN114BB
IN114BBST/V31
IN118BB
IN118BBST
IN116BB
IN116BBST
IN119BB
IN188DD
Baud Rate : 9600; Data Bi ts: 8; Parit y: None; S top Bit s: 1; Flow Con trol: Non e; UART16 550 FIFO: Di sable
Projector Re turn (Pass): P; Proj ector Re turn (Fai l): F
XX= 00-99 (Pojector's ID), XX= 00 is for all projectors
Note :
1. There i s a <CR> after al l ASC II comman ds
2. 0D is the HEX code for <CR> in ASCII code
ASCII Code HEX Code
R002 ~XX10 8 1 7E 30 30 31 30 38 20 31 0D
Lamp Hours
aaaaa=(5 digits) Total
Lamp Hours
Okaaaaa No Yes Yes Yes Yes
R003 ~XX121 1 7E 30 30 31 32 31 20 31 0D
Input So urce Comm ands
a=0, None
a=1, HDMI (HDMI 1)
a=5, VGA
a=9, S-Video
a=10, Video
a=15, HDMI 2
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R004 ~XX122 1 7E 30 30 31 32 32 20 31 0D
Software Version
aaaa=Software Version
Okaaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R005 ~XX123 1 7E 30 30 31 32 33 20 31 0D
Display Mode
a=0, None
a=1, Presentation
a=2, Bright
a=3, Movie (Cinema)
a=4, sRGB
a=5, User
a=9, 3D
a=13, DICOM SIM.
a=14, ISF Day
a=15, ISF Night
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R006 ~XX124 1 7E 30 30 31 32 34 20 31 0D
Power State
a=0, Off
a=1, On
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R007 ~XX12 5 1 7E 30 30 31 32 35 20 31 0D
Brightness
aaa=-50~+50
Okaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R008 ~XX126 1 7E 30 30 31 32 36 20 31 0D
Contrast
aaa=-50~+50
Okaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R009 ~XX127 1 7E 30 30 31 32 37 20 31 0D
Aspect Ratio
aa=0, None
aa=1, 4:3
aa=2, 16:9
aa=3, 16:10
aa=5, LBX
aa=6, Native
aa=7, Auto
Okaa No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
R010 ~XX128 1 7E 30 30 31 32 38 20 31 0D
Color Te mperatu re
a=1, Warm
a=2, Medium
a=3, Cold
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R011 ~XX129 1 7E 30 30 31 32 39 20 31 0D
Projection Mode
a=0, Front
a=1, Rear
a=2, Front-Ceilin g
a=3, Rear-Ceiling
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R012 ~XX150 1 7E 30 30 31 35 30 20 31 1D
Information
a=Power Status
a=0, Power Off
a=1, Power On
bbbbb=Lamp Hours
cc=Input Source
cc=00, None
cc=01, HDMI (HDMI 1)
cc=05, VGA
cc=09, S-Video
cc=10, Video
cc=15, HDMI 2
dddd=Software Version
ee=Display Mode
Okabbbbbccddddee No Yes Yes Yes Yes
R013 ~XX150 4 7E 30 30 31 35 30 20 34 0D
Resolution
a=string (e.g.
Ok1920x10 80)
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes No signal (a=Ok0x 0)
R015 ~XX150 19 7E 30 30 31 35 30 20 31 39 0D
Refresh ra te
a=string (e.g. Ok60 Hz)
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes No signal (a=Ok0Hz )
R016 ~XX151 1 7E 30 30 31 35 31 20 31 0D
Model Name
a=1, SVGA
a=2, XGA
a=3, WXGA
a=4, 1080p
a=5, WUXGA
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R017 ~XX108 1 7E 30 30 31 30 38 20 31 0D
Lamp Hours
aaaaa=00000~9999 9
Okaaaaa No Yes Yes Yes Yes
R018 ~XX321 1 7E 30 30 33 32 31 20 31 0D
Filter Usage Hours
aaaaa=00000~9999 9
Okaaaaa No No No No No
R019 ~XX352 1 7E 30 30 33 35 32 20 31 0D
System Temperature
aaa=000~999
Okaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R020 ~XX353 1 7E 30 30 33 35 33 20 31 0D
Serial Number
a=string
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R022 ~XX355 1 7E 30 30 33 35 35 20 31 0D
AV Mute
a=0, Off
a=1, On
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R023 ~XX356 1 7E 30 30 33 35 36 20 31 0D
Mute
a=0, Off
a=1, On
Oka No Ye s Yes Ye s Yes
R025 ~XX543 1 7E 30 30 35 34 33 20 31 0D
H Image Shift
aaaa=-100~+100
Okaaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R026 ~XX543 2 7E 30 30 35 34 33 20 32 0D
V Image S hift
aaaa=-100~+100
Okaaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R027 ~XX543 3 7E 30 30 35 34 33 20 33 0D
V Keyst one
aaa=-40~+40
Okaaa No Yes Ye s Yes Yes
R028 ~XX558 1 7E 30 30 35 35 38 20 31 0D
Projector ID
aa=00~99
Okaa No Ye s Yes Yes Ye s
Note 1: ~xx112 1 ~nnn n (nnn n = password) Wh en secu rity is on, y ou nee d to add password after comm and or it will re turn F.
Note 2: Wh en the projector show o ther OSD, use r key th e command “~XX313 0 7E 30 30 33 31 33 20 30 0D Information menu Off ( 0/2 for backward compatible)” then it will retu rn F.
Index
Function
READ from Projector
Command Set
Projector Return
Support (Yes/No)
Notes
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