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From an Engadget review: “A note on pixel shifting: As with other 4K DLP projectors in the budget category (yes, this one technically qualifies), it's equipped with Texas Instrument's XPR DLP chip, which has a native 1080p resolution. However, it uses "pixel shifting" to emit that pixel four times while moving it to the correct position for a 4K image. All that happens in less than 1/60th of a second, meaning it puts as many pixels on the screen in the same amount of time as a 4K native projector. That makes it 4K for all intents and purposes, and visually, it performs nearly as well."
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The Vava projector uses a Texas Instrument's XPR DLP display chip, which has a native 1080p resolution. However, this chip uses "pixel shifting," This means that it tilts each pixel four times each image frame to the correct position to produce a 4K image. All that happens in less than 1/60th of a second, meaning it puts as many pixels on the screen in the same amount of time as a 4K native projector.
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