BenQ W1800 review: A 4K treat for home cinema fans

Rivals win on brightness and HDR, but this is a superb-value home cinema projector
Written By
Published on 23 March 2022
Our rating
Reviewed price £1099 inc VAT
Pros
  • Brilliant, natural colours
  • Strong grasp of detail
  • Easy to set up and use
Cons
  • Limited brightness levels and HDR
  • Short on other modes and features

On paper, its hard to get too excited about the BenQ W1800. Sure, its a 4K projector for around a grand but, between the Optoma UHD38, ViewSonic X10-4K and BenQs own excellent TK700, such things no longer seem miraculous.

The W1800 doesnt have the gaming features of the TK700 or the Optoma and it doesnt go as bright, and it cant rival the ViewSonic when it comes to lamp life. In fact, the only hints of its capabilities come in its support for Filmmaker Mode and a claimed 100% coverage of the Rec. 709 colour space, which is itself more integral to the old HDTV standards than it is to current UHD specs.

However, whats on paper doesnt always tell the whole story. Up and running the W1800 has its flaws, but what works makes it a great home cinema projector, especially if you dont have vast amounts of cash to splash around.

The W1800 is a 4K HDR projector skewed towards home cinema more than all-round entertainment, with Filmmaker Mode to disable any image-compromising, post-processing effects and ensure that the aspect ratio, frame rates and colours you see on your screen are exactly what the film-makers intended. If youve seen it at work on a good LCD or OLED TV, youll know why this is a good thing.

To help, the projector promises to cover the full Rec. 709 colour standard, while providing optimised HDR10 and HLG support. Like most 4K projectors under £2,000, the 0.47in DLP chip inside the W1800 doesnt support 4K resolution natively but uses rapid pixel shifting at 240Hz to provide a near-perfect simulation instead.

The projector also has a relatively short throw of 1.3:1 with the zoom control at full, giving you a 100in picture at a distance of only 2.5m. The only worrying spec is a maximum brightness of just 2,000 ANSI lumens.

Its on brightness that the W1800s major competitors win through. The Optoma UHD38 can go up to 4,000 ANSI lumens, while the TK700 reaches 3,200. Even the LED-powered ViewSonic X10-4K can hit 2,400 ANSI lumens. Whats more, the first two projectors have a selection of handy built-in gaming features, while the X10-4K has an incredibly long lamp life of 30,000 hours. The BenQ W1800 can do up to 15,000 hours in its lamp save mode, but only 8,000 in the most balanced Smart Eco mode and just 4,000 when its set to normal. After that, youre looking at a pricey lamp replacement.

The brightness limitation means the BenQ isnt the best projector for use in brighter rooms. It is usable with some ambient light but its undoubtedly at its best in a darkened room. But theres more to picture quality than brightness, as Ill get to in a minute.

READ NEXT: These are our favourite home cinema projectors

The physical design of the W1800 sits pretty close to BenQs established style, with a fairly compact, rectangular unit made of matte white plastics and a bronze-colour faceplate surrounding the lens. Theres easy access to the focus and zoom wheels at the top, plus a set of controls to cover all the basic adjustments should you mislay the remote control in the middle of a Netflix binge. Our model came with a very useful remote with switchable backlighting, which made it a whole lot easier to adjust picture settings and change sources in the dark.

For connectivity you have two HDMI 2.0b sockets, supporting HDCP 2.2, plus a serial connector for control applications, an audio output and a USB port. Our sample also came with a compartment where you could fit BenQs QS01 Android TV streaming stick. This is actually one of the best Android TV streaming sticks weve looked at and can be found bundled with the W1800 for under £900 in some sales. But as it doesnt currently support Netflix, wed still recommend a Fire TV or Roku 4K streaming stick if you have the choice. We used the latter during testing and it worked superbly well.

Setup is fairly painless, partly because BenQs 2D keystoning controls make it easy to iron out any issues caused by the positioning or angle of projection. It isnt automatic, and neither is focus, but it doesnt take an awful lot of work. The menus arent the easiest to understand and you have to enable Advanced mode to unlock a lot of the settings, but one of the beauties of Filmmaker mode, when you use it, is that you can trust it to handle all the tricky stuff.

The first thing that strikes you with the W1800s pictures is how smooth and natural they look. The Optoma UHD38 and BenQ TK700 deliver a brighter, slightly crisper image but, for cinematic visuals, the W1800 is in a different league. I tested it on a range of material using the Roku 4K Streaming Stick and 4K Blu-rays, from Marvel and Star Wars blockbusters such as Avengers: Endgame and The Last Jedi to The Marvellous Mrs Maisel, Reacher, Only Murders in the Building and Knives Out. The W1800 never faltered when it came to detail, colour, richness or depth. Its always a good sign when I forget that Im reviewing and settle in just to watch. With the BenQ W1800, this happened a lot.

Any weaknesses are predictable. The black level is dark but not exactly deep and this, coupled with the low brightness levels (I measured a mere 178cd/m² reflected off the screen) mean this shouldnt be your first choice of projector if youre a massive fan of HDR. However, there is a noticeable difference between, say, Thor: Ragnarok with HDR turned on and with HDR turned off, so theres clearly some degree of optimisation going on.

Its the colours that swing it for the W1800, though. Not only did this projector slightly exceed Rec.709 in testing but colour accuracy is fantastic by projector standards, with an average Delta E of 2.89. Its only serious rival here is the Viewsonic X10-4K and thats slightly more expensive.

There arent any specific gaming modes here, but the BenQ W1800 can run PC and console games at 1080p with a refresh rate of 120Hz or 240Hz. And while its no match for the UHD38 or TK700 on this ground, its still great for a spot of Destiny 2 or Elden Ring when youve finished watching films. You will need an external sound system, though. While the 5W internal speaker can get loud enough for casual viewing, the sounds a little too flat and boxy for anything more.

READ NEXT: The best portable projectors to buy

Rivals have the W1800 beaten when it comes to HDR, brightness and contrast, then, but youll struggle to find another 4K projector at this price that delivers a more natural, cinematic image.

Look elsewhere for a gaming projector or a versatile, daylight-friendly all-rounder but, if youre most concerned with using your projector to watch films and 4K streaming series, this is one of the best options for around £1,000.

Written by

Stuart Andrews has been writing about technology and computing for over 25 years and has written for nearly every major UK PC and tech outlet, including PC Pro and the Sunday Times. He still writes about PCs, laptops and enterprise computing, plus PC and console gaming, but he also likes to get his hands dirty with the latest gardening tools and chill out with his favourite movies. He loves to test things and will benchmark anything and everything that comes his way.

More about
OSZAR »