1-3 of 3 Answers
I can't speak for that particular player, but this projector does accept a native 4K HDR signal from my PS4 Pro, XBox One S, and Fire TV (box, haven't tried the stick). Also be advised that only one of the HDMI inputs (I believe HDMI 2) supports HDCP 2.2, so you'll need to use some sort of switch for multiple devices. If you're considering this projector and use your audio receiver as a switch for HDMI, remember to check if your receiver supports 4K/HDR passthrough with HDCP 2.2. Otherwise, you'll probably have to get a compatible HDMI switch (I'm currently using the SwitchDeck SW-32911) and run an optical cable back to your receiver for audio.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It depends on what devices are connected to it.... Right now, I have a Dish Network Hopper 3 4K receiver, fed into a Marantz SR5010 4K receiver, and an original XBoxOne (not the S). Right now, the Xbox holds it back as 1080p is its' maximum output. I have an Xbox One X coming on 11/7 that will erase this bottleneck (and get me an Ultra 4K BluRay player to boot along with 4K versions of Netflix and other streaming services). I did test the 4K signal by bypassing the AV receiver and Xbox to test the cable's ability to effectively pass a 4K signal. A 10 year old 50 ft. HDMI cable failed to pass any signal. We upgraded to an Insignia 50 ft. cable and that failed as well. We rearranged things and swapped in an Insignia 25' cable and that worked finally. Also, make sure your internet speed is up to the task... Not sure how much bandwidth a 4K signal takes up by itself. Three cheers for Fios Gigabit in my town. To recap, check all your devices for max resolution AND check your cables to make sure they aren't the cause of your frustration.
I would recommend:
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not really it looks more like 1080p but on YouTube it looks like real 4k hdr more beter picture
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.



