Operation
44
•
The black portions are inactive areas and the white portions are active areas.
•
OSD menus can be displayed on those unused black areas.
2.
Real
: The image is projected as its
original resolution, and resized to fit
within the display area. For input
signals with lower resolutions, the
projected image will display smaller
than if resized to full screen. You
could adjust the zoom setting or
move the projector away from the
screen to increase the image size if
necessary. You may also need to
refocus the projector after making
these adjustments.
3.
4:3
: Scales an image so that it is
displayed in the center of the screen
with a 4:3 aspect ratio. This is most
suitable for 4:3 images like
computer monitors, standard
definition TV and 4:3 images aspect
DVD movies, as it displays them
without aspect alteration.
5.
Wide
: Stretches the picture
horizontally in a non-linear manner,
that is, the edges of the picture are
stretched more than the center of
the picture to prevent distortion of
the central part of the picture. This
is suitable for occassions where you
want to stretch the width of a 4:3
aspect picture to the width of a 16:9
aspect screen. It does not alter the
height. Some widescreen movies
have been produced with their
width squashed down to the width
of a 4:3 aspect, and are best viewed
when restretched back to their
original width using this setting..
6.
Letter Box:
Scales a picture to fit
the projector’s native resolution in
its horizontal width and resize the
picture’s height to the 3/4 of the
projection width. This may produce
a picture greater in height than can
be displayed, so part of the picture
is lost (not displayed) along the top
and bottom edges of the projection.
This is suitable for the display of
movies which are presented in
letter box format (with black bars
on the top and bottom).
4:3 picture
16:9 picture
16:9 picture
4:3 picture
16:9 picture
Letter Box
format picture
BenQ W1300.book Page 44 Thursday, August 29, 2013 2:07 PM