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Optoma UHD60 True 4K UHD Projector, Bright 3000 Lumens, Entertainment and Movies, Rec.2020 with DCI-P3 for Wide Color Gamut, HDMI 2.0 and HDR10, WHITE

  • Based on 416 reviews
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Arrives Jun 1 – Jun 9
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Features

  • TRUE 4K ULTRA HD: Experience premium, high-quality home cinema feel with 8.3 million distinct addressable on-screen pixels, enabled by the Texas Instruments 4K UHD DLP chipset
  • 4X THE PIXELS OF 1080p: See more detail with 4 times the pixels of your 1080p HDTV; higher resolution creates a razor sharp picture for the ultimate 4K home theater experience
  • ULTRA-BRIGHT: With 3,000 lumens, the UHD60 is bright enough in any room in the house, whether in a well-lit living room or a dimly lit home theater space
  • HDR COMPATIBLE: HDR10 technology with DCI-P3 wide color gamut support displays everything in the REC.2020 colors; also providing brighter whites, deeper blacks, and greater color depth
  • LONG LAMP LIFE: Enjoy up to 15,000 hours of lamp life enabling an average of 4 hours of viewing time every day 10+ years
  • HIGH CONTRAST RATIO: Dynamic Black technology provides more depth to the image by smoothing lamp output to create an incredibly high contrast ratio (1,000,000:1); bright scenes appear clear while dark scenes remain detailed
  • FLEXIBLE INSTALLATION: Whether ceiling mounted or placed on a table, get your picture just right with 1.6x zoom, throw ratio, vertical lens shift and keystone correction; Throw Ratio: 1.39 2.22:1
  • VARIETY OF INPUTS: Connect with most media players, gaming consoles, PCs, Macs, and mobile devices with input options such as HDMI with HDCP 2.2 support, HDMI 4K, USB, VGA, and more
  • ULTRA-SHARP PICTURE: UltraDetail technology ensures enhanced image sharpness with a higher frame rate to deliver a crystal clear picture

Description

The Optima UHD60 is a state-of-the-art true 4K Ultra High Definition (UHD) projector capable of delivering ultra sharp images with a high level of detail and breathtaking color. With 4 times the pixels of 1080p, ultra-high resolution of 3840x2160, super-bright 3, 000 lumens, 1, 000, 000: 1 contrast ratio, the Optima UHD60 delivers the ultimate 4K UHD home viewing experience bringing content to life with thrilling detail, color and contrast. The Optima UHD60 meets the true 4K UHD 2160p standard as mandated by Consumer Technology Association. Powered by Texas Instruments' 4K DLP(R) UHD chipset high performance video processing technology, the UHD60 displays 8. 3 million distinct pixels. The UHD60 can project up to 300" for an immersive home cinematic experience. High Dynamic Range delivers bright and luminous whites, deep black levels, and beautiful, life-like, real world color that was previously only possible to view on the big screen in movie theaters. A generous 15% vertical lens shift and 1. 6x optical zoom provide a great deal of placement flexibility within any home. Dual 4W stereo speakers generate audio that is loud and crisp. The UHD60's long lamp life provides up to 15, 000 hours – that's an average of two 2-hour movies every day for 10+ years.


Brand Name: ‎Optoma


Item Weight: ‎16 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎13 x 19.6 x 5.6 inches


Item model number: ‎UHD60


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Color Name: ‎WHITE


Special Features: ‎Long lamp life 15,000 hours, HDR10, 1.6x zoom, Super bright 3,000 lumens, Speakers, True 4k, Lens shift


Speaker Type: ‎Stereo


Item display height: ‎13 inches


Date First Available: June 5, 2017


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jun 1 – Jun 9

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Fantastic Projector and Learning about HDMI
This is a truly great projector, but getting the most out of it takes some planning and additional expense. I purchased this through Visual Apex, because of stock issues with Amazon. VA is an Amazon merchant, so at least there's that. We purchased this to replace an aging Benq W1070. The Projector is a little larger than expected, but size is not really an issue, and is clearly listed in the spec sheet. I ceiling mounted this with the Optoma OCM818W-RU mount, and mounting the projector only took a little effort. I highly recommend the Optoma mount. It is more expensive, but sturdy. It is much smaller than it seems in the picture. Mounting the projector only took minutes. The top cover on the projector is a bit flimsy and not up to the standards of a $2k item. Fit and finish here could be better. I had read a bit about HDMI cables and the need to buy "good" ones for 4k, HDCP, etc., etc. I also read many articles claiming that HDMI is HDMI and any High Speed cable will do. My issue was a 35 foot run from Onkyo TX-RZ800 to the projector. Our Benq worked fine with a 50' cable at 1080p, but I was aware that length could be an issue with 4k. I had bought the highest quality reasonably priced (Kolife) cable that was "high speed" rated, and said 4k, HDCP 2.2, 18ghz, 24ga, 4k@60. I was using a Sony UBP-X800 as the 4k source. I used the Optoma-supplied "high speed" HDMI cable going from the Sony to Onkyo. While I was able to see a 4k signal, I couldn't do so reliably. There were picture artifacts, flashes, dropped signals, and general poor image quality. I ran the long HDMI cable directly to the Sony and the issues got worse. So, the Onkyo was actually helping things. I also tried a signal booster at either end of the long HDMI run. That didn't work, either. As it turns out, HDMI is a poor platform for 4K@60. But, that's what we have..... After doing some research and finding out that HDMI cables DO MATTER VERY MUCH when considering long runs and 4k@60, I bought the RUIPRO HDMI Fiber Cable 33 foot cable. The fiber optic solution fixed ALL signal drops, so we are in business. Any HDMI cable will not do the job, especially if you are going many feet. You absolutely need to spend the time to find the right solution to fit your budget and specific setup. Also remember that there is a difference in running 4k@60 vs 4k@30 or 24. You will experience more issues with inferior cables at the highest data rates. A cheap short cable may work for you, but absolutely did not for me. I highly recommend the fiber optic solution for long HDMI runs. The Ruipro seems to have great reviews and it worked wonders for my setup. As for the projector itself, setup was a breeze. The large amount of zoom will help you find optimal placement in your space. This projector lacks keystone adjustment, so you'll have to have the vertical placement figured out. It does provide (15%?) vertical lens shift. The fan noise is moderate to low. I only notice it in a very quiet room. Even normal movie dialogue is enough to drown out the fan noise. Images are stunning, to say the least! Fantastic colors, good blacks in a dark room. Sharpness that is hard to find anywhere at this price. For $2k, you get as big a screen as you can handle at home in fabulous 4K. Really amazing! Remember that this is a projector, though. It performs best in a darkened room, and will never be bright enough to compete against lots of ambient light. It is slightly brighter than the W1070. (3000 vs 2200 lumens). Movies, games, and TV are all great with this projector. I think the lag time is better than the Benq, because everything seems more synchronized, and gaming is great! There are plenty of menu settings to play around with. I like Ultra Detail, but found that Dynamic Black seemed to add a little bit of noise to the image. The HDR setting seems to be the best (to my eye). For me, this projector has a few minor drawbacks: 1- No keystone adjustment, placement must be planned. At least there's some vertical lens shift. Not a huge deal, but keystone is nice. 2- No 3D - For me this was no big whup. Our family decided 3D was more trouble than it was worth. Just be aware there's no 3D. 3- Limited to 8bit when running 4K@60. Must slow it down to 4k@24 or 30 to get 10bit and 12bit. Now, I'm no techie. I don't fully understand if this is a limitation of HDMI, the Projector, or what. I have seen some color banding in some images (gradient sky, etc.). I also don't know yet if this is cable related between the source and Onkyo. (better cables ordered). I can just see that color banding improves some when the feed is limited to 4k@24 and have read that color banding could be related to color depth. UPDATE: Better cables helped some of the color banding issue and it is far less noticeable. 4- This does not have an RGBRGB color wheel. It's RGBCY. For me, this makes the typical DLP rainbow effect a little more noticeable, but it does help provide the extra brightness. A tradeoff. I like the brighter image, so for me this is a good choice vs. the UHD65. We have also added a 4K@60 Roku Ultra, and it is having the same signal drops using a 6ft "High speed 4K 2160p, 3D, 24awg, gold connector" cable (Farstrider). Based on the above experience and experimenting with several cables, I KNOW it's the cable, and have ordered replacements. Again, ANY cable won't do at 4k@60. The Roku Ultra is all 4k@60 all the time. I'll report back on the AudioQuest cables. To sum up.... This is a great projector, and is the best deal on the market today. It does have some minor limitations. Also know that 4K@60 is not exactly "plug-and-play." You'll be buying some cables and doing some research. UPDATE: The addition of 1m Audioquest Forest cables solved the issue of signal drops with the Roku Ultra. Using the AQ cables also seemed to improve the image coming from the Sony UBP-X800. There seems to be less color banding and dynamic range artifacts. They SEEM to make a big difference, but it is hard to quantify. UPDATE AGAIN: After spending a month with this projector, I've decided that some of the image artifacts may relate to how the image was coded, as well as some of the conversions from SD to UHD. On the Sony UBP800, SD up-conversion gets set to 4K@24. If the source is at a higher frame rate, it passes through. The Roku Ultra is all-4k@60 all the time, and there's no way to change the Roku to a lower frame rate. Hence, there are still more image quality issues and dropped signals with the Roku. It's just flaky. As soon as I can get HBO and STarZ on the Sony, the Roku goes away! Image quality with the Sony Blu-ray is much better and much more reliable. There are still a few image artifacts that I can't explain, some slight color banding in some scenes, where other similar scenes are just fine. I'm beginning to believe it's mostly the fault of the source material? So far, the Optoma is working like a champ. The projector is still not quite as nice as a good 4k LCD TV or OLED, but the SIZE!!! This is still the best option for affordable 4K in a size where 4K matters. UPDATE AGAIN (3/2019). This unit is being returned for warranty repair. The HDMI2 input (the one that handles 4k) has given up and won't find any signal at any resolution. HDMI-1 will accept up to a 1080p signal. The folks at Optoma approved the RMA within 24 hours and I'll update again once the projector comes back. The HDMI issues never really went away completely with random signal drops. Perhaps the HDMI board was always a little bit flaky. Overall, it is still a nice projector, but a 4K LCD TV is much less trouble and gives better performance if you can live with 75". The projector came back within about a week and a half of when I shipped it. Good service, tracking all the way. I did not get much communication about what Optoma did to fix it. No paperwork. Nothing. But, it came back fixed, so no worries. I have decided to go back to a 75" LCD TV. I'm Sad to lose the size, but LCD is still giving better overall performance. I am tired of fighting the HDMI issues of 4K and 35ft. The LCD TV just has a better picture, less color banding, no rainbow effect, better HDR, and is much better suited to daytime use. I still think the Optoma is a fine projector given that it is the first one ever that is affordable to average folks. But, I don't think the technology is quite there yet. Maybe in another few years, it will be ready. At least for us LCD TV is a better fit. I am sad to go smaller, but there are other benefits. Overall, 4 stars. Kudos to Optoma for warranty and customer support. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2017 by Adam

  • Bad HDMI Ports
Purchase from Amazon Oct 2017. April 2018 both HDMI stopped working. Sent back to Optoma. Repaired and sent back to me. Two weeks later, had the same problems (No HDMI Signal Found). Sent back to Optoma. Replaced with a REFURBISHED UNIT!!!!!!! One week and a half HDMI 2 Port stopped working, then three days later, the HDMI 1 Port stopped working. Glad I purchased a four-year warranty. Looks like after spending $2000.00 for the projector (Optoma UHD60), I will spend the next FOUR-YEARS sending it in for repairs. I tried to put this review on Optoma's Web Site and The Projector People.Com Website (who recommend this projector), but my COMMENTS has not been approved for their site????? Don't buy this projector. BIGGGGG Disappointment. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2018 by Mike Mike

  • Warranty is a pain. Don't purchase
I bought this projector less than a year ago and the hdmi inputs have already gone out on me. It has a two year warranty, yes, and it covers the hdmi ports. After confirming the hdmi ports were indeed covered under the warranty I have yet to hear back from optoma about how they plan on fixing the problem. After multiple emails and calls with no results I have decided to leave this feedback. Maybe if their sales are affected they will start taking better care of their existing customers. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2018 by Paul T.

  • HDR and 4k
The UHD60 produces an excellent 4k image but the best feature is the HDR. I use this projector for movies and gaming. Horizon Zero Dawn looks amazing on the PS4 Pro. I attached a photo with HDR off and HDR on. I also noticed that dark scenes are much better than my GT1080 projector that I replaced. I have no problem with 4k60 going through my Denon AVR-X3200W using the cable that came with the projector from my PS4 Pro to the receiver and I bought the RUIPRO 33ft Fiber HDMI cable to go from the receiver to the projector. Overall this is a great projector. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2017 by Laurel Polley Laurel Polley

  • Very, very happy with this unit!
Got my UHD60 a few days ago from Amazon. Buyer from Australia here. I’m no pro reviewer, but thought I’s share my thoughts here as it’s pretty hard to get feedback on them at the moment. Cost was just under $3100 AU from Amazon, inc import duties and expedited shipping. My last projector was Epson 9100, which I am keeping for 3D playback. My set up is on a Carson mechanised 110 inch screen, casting from 3.6 meters. Feed content through Panasonic UHD 900, PS4 Pro, and Chromecast Ultra. I bought the UHD60 as I use projector not in a bat cave, but in a room which is fairly light controlled, but with some ambient light leakage. Also gaming is important, so the 60 was for me. Overall, EXTREMELY impressed with this unit. Though of course, not perfect. • Regarding set up…you MUST be able to align in absolute centre of screen, at either very close to the top, or bottom of the screen. You can only lens shift to 15 Degrees, and ONLY upwards if you are throwing from below, or only downwards if from ceiling mount. • No power cord problems, uses standard PC power cord, so just use an Aussie one. No voltage issues. • As everyone has noted, unit build is a bit crappy / plastic…but aesthetic I think is pretty good. All controls re lens are manual. • Big tip…important how you get content to it – I re did my set up to have my Pana UHD 900 close to the unit, as well as my PS4..so Ididnt need to pay out hundreds for fibre HDMI leads. • I also have the Sammy UHD 8500, and that was useless compared to the quality and control I got out of the Pana UHD 900 on the Optoma. NIGHT and DAY difference. PS4 Pro gaming works a treat, gets full HDR etc compatability in the video settings. Gaming in 4K is amazing on the Optoma. Wipeout, Horizon Dawn, Uncharted etc are just awesome, and lag is not an issue. However, video feeds from the PS4 are pretty crap, eg Netflix, Stan, Plex. If you can , get your video feeds from a dedicated player, as I have said, especially the Pana UHD 900. On that unit, Netflix 4k / HDR looks fantastic. It doesn’t have Plex, so I use Plex via Chromecast Ultra for 1080p files, which looks great, even though the HDMI 1.4 port. Plex on the PS4 Pro looked like arse. Seriously. • Optoma upscales 1080p files and Blurays like a treat. Very impressed. • I have NOT professionally calibrated. • Optoma resolution is just great, so happy with it. 4K really is razor sharp, of course, blacks could be better. But by no means a dealbreaker, depending on how fussy you are. BIG TIP – use DYNAMIC BLACK…it really works well. And be prepared to spend some time trawling the forums for getting tweaks for diff types of content re settings, it really helps. When you are experimenting, pay close attention to colour gamut, as well as Gamma presets, they make a BIG difference. • HDR generally works surprisingly well..especially with gaming, and my fave UHD discs, depending on the source material. Big tip here…if on a UHD disc source, HDR looks dodgy…strip HDR from the source player (Pana does it) and get straight 4K out put..solves a lot of problems. For example, the new Prometheus UHD look GREAT in full 4k / HDR…better than I was even hoping for. But…Alien Covenant…seems they somehow screwed the HDR on that, so I strip the HDR from it, to just 4K output, and it looks fantastic. Overall, I am extremely impressed with this Optoma. As has been well reported, if you don’t care about gaming and want better blacks, go the UHD65. But either way…for this amount of money compared to the competition, I reckon Optoma have really hit it out of the park. I’m planning on keeping it almost as a stop gap for a couple years, till someone makes a great 4K native player that also does great 3D, and does not cost over ten grand. Like I said, I’m no expert, but hope this info has helped. Cheers ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2017 by Amazon Customer

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