- 1280 x 720, 720p HD Resolution and 6,000:1 Contrast Ratio
- 2000 Lumens Brightness via a 220 W UHM lamp
- LCD x 3 R, G, B
- 2 HDMI, 1 Component, 1 S-Video, 1 Video Inputs
- Comes with power cord, wireless remote control and batteries for remote
The PT-AX200 is ideal for watching sports events or playing video games in daylight conditions and surely for viewing movies in a dark room. Powerful 2000-lumen brightness and new Light Harmonizer 2 technology make it easy for people to enjoy vibrant, dynamic images even if they don’t have a special theater room. Panasonic’s advanced technologies improve color reproduction accuracy in movies, to deliver images with a refined “Hollywood picture quality,” making this projector ideal as the heart of a home cinema system.
Rating:
(out of 27 reviews)
List Price: $ 1,099.99
Price: Too low to display



June 6, 2010
#1
Review by Edward Yang
Rating:
Didn’t think buying a projector would take as long as it did. I’ve been researching projectors off and on for the past 2 and a half years and have enjoyed the process of testing a virtually endless onslaught of manufacturers and different image quality. Finally decided on a Panasonic PT-AX200U due to a special running through HTmarket.com that had a mail in rebate for an additional 1 year warranty on the purchase of a Panasonic projector. I bought my projector for $1299 and have had about a month to play with the projector.
Initial highlights – good projector for the money if you have a good source (HD DVD/Blu Ray/upconverting DVD player). Very easy setup with image adjustments. I was up and running in 5 minutes.
Friends and family are stunned at the size of the screen images capable with this projector (I’m running a 110 inch screen). Clearly capable of more than that.
Good image for old format DVDs IF you have a DVD upconverter to 720p/1080i/1080p. I initially ran a couple of DVDs, the Incredibles, Lord of the Rings, the Matrix, Blade, into through my Denon DVD 2900 (originally a $1000 DVD player) and was somewhat disappointed by the pixelation and some noticeable Screen Door Effect (SDE).
My brother came over the following weekend with his Sony Playstation 3 and we ran one of his videogames through the HDMI cable into the projector to see if we could tell a difference – whoa, noticeable difference in image detail and elimination of the pixelation and SDE.
Went out to Best Buy the following weekend to buy a cheap RCA dvd up converter for $30 and now run all my DVDs through it.
Would recommend this projector if pairing to a high gain screen – the bulb brightness, while bright for stock, definitely requires a high gain (+1.3) screen to maximize some of the darker image films (Blade/Matrix/Lord of the Rings/Aliens).
June 6, 2010
#2
Review by Real Home Theaters
Rating:
I am the lead installer for a company that installs RealHomeTheaters, so hopefully my experience can be of some help. This projector has some great features not found on all projectors in it’s class.
1. Great throw ratio. ( the zoom lens on this projector allows you to throw a 120″ image from as close as 11′ and from as far from the screen as 22′.)
2. Brightness. ( at 2000 lumens it is one of the brightest 720p 16:9 home theater projectors in it’s class. This allows you to overcome ambient light that would “washout” dimmer projectors.)
3. Lens Shift. ( give you the ability to mount the projector off camber to the screen and in most cases higher or lower than normally possible with other projectors.)
But, if you have a normal room with controlled lighting and are able to install the projector at a normal height (7 to 10′ off the floor) and centered on the screen. You will not benefit from this projector. Consider the Mitsubishi HC1500 and be sure to read my review on it as well. It will give you just as strong of an end result and save you some money. Provided you do not need any of the three features above.
Hope this helps get your RealHomeTheaters off the ground!
June 6, 2010
#3
Review by B. Almonrode
Rating:
I purchased the PT-AX200U for my dedicated home theater room in Aug 2007 after much reading and reviewing all options. Projectorcentral dot com is one of the best sources of information such as placement as well as reviews (both professional and consumer).
About the projector: Sharp, clear and bright (2000 lumens is really bright). While this PJ is ‘only’ 720p several professional reviewers have dubbed this the ‘poor-mans’ 1080p. Panasonic has developed a technology called smooth screen that effectively minimizes screen door effect and it really works. I have my viewing area exactly 1.8x the diagonal (105″ screen) and there is NO pixel distinction.
Setup: This was a snap. I used the much debated Avia setup DVD and the “Cinema 1″ Mode was spot on out of the box. Looked great.
Gaming: While we are not a gaming family, we do have a Wii hooked up with great results. We also have the Fisher Price Smart Cycle and it looks awful – terrible resolution a la 1985. The PJ just exacerbates the lousy FP technology in the Smart Cycle – Don’t misunderstand – the Smart Cycle is great – just needs real graphics.
Placement: This PJ has phenomenal flexibility with incredible lens shift and 2.0x zoom. To make a 106″ picture unit can be from about 10 feet to about 20 feet away. Look carefully at zoom and lens shift before you buy.
Compatibility: This PJ accepts nearly all inputs (i.e. 1080p/24) and does not have to put the picture through 2:3 pull down. If you are considering a Blu-Ray or HD DVD be sure to check the signal compatibility of the PJ you are considering.
Noise: I sit under and just behind the PJ installed on the ceiling and it’s barley audible with no other sound in the room. Very good dB rating.
Summary: Great value. Great picture. Easy installation. 2 HDMI ports. Highly recommended!
June 6, 2010
#4
Review by Sean Fitzroy
Rating:
This projector is simply fantastic. DVD’s look great and HD sources look even better. While very similar to last years model, this one has an additional HDMI input and, more importantly, is about $700 cheaper. Some benefits:
- Amazingly versatile placement options with wide zoom range and lens shift. I have this projector mounted on a shelf above my couch. This is perferable to a coffee table, and much less invasive than a ceiling mount. It’s also very quiet – especially in eco mode.
- Extremely film-like “Cinema” mode right out of the box. I felt no need to calibrate this thing beyond the factory preset, although you can use a calibration DVD with color bars and adjust it yourself.
- LCD. It spite of what you might hear about DLP being more film-like, the image from the PT-AX200U is awesome. DLP projectors in this price range use a spinning color wheel which is usually louder and prone to requiring repairs. Worst DLP projectors can leave a rainbow trail / after-image detectable in a percentage of the population. Even if you can’t see the rainbows, do your guests a favor and go LCD.
- Larger image and more flexible than a TV. If you’re considering a plasma or LCD TV and enjoy watching movies (but don’t necessarily leave the TV all the time), consider this projector. It’s smaller, much easier to move, less expensive, and casts an amazing 106″ image. If you have a room where you can control the light level (it doesn’t have to have dark walls) this is the way to go for watching movies.
-This projector works very well hooked up to a computer. I have a Mac Mini that I use thru a DVI to HDMI converter and it works great, but you can also use a standard VGA connector. In the summer you can take it in the backyard, connect it to a laptop and project movies outside your BBQ or pool party.
June 6, 2010
#5
Review by Chad Gilmour
Rating:
best projector under [...] hands down.
I was looking for a projector that would be able to play nice with my Mac via a digital connection, do HD, be able to hook up an HDMI source, as well as an SD source and haven’t been disappointed at all!
NOTE: Not all DVD players are created equal and if you think your image looks kind of crappy, consider the source, I played a DVD through my PS2 onto this thing and it looked like crap, I could literally count the pixels, then I played a DVD through my Mac and I felt like I was sitting in a freaking theatre, it was pristine and clear and the colors were amazing.
I have mine hooked up to a receiver that up-converts my SD TV signal to 1080 and it looks alright (but what can you expect when you blow a 720×480 pixel image up to 92″!), though some channels I’ve noticed are better than others, it really shines when you play an HD source through it.
Sometimes you have to fiddle with the color/luminance options, but the good news is it has a ton options to tweak, and you can save profiles, so you basically tweak it once and load up different settings for different sources.
I play DVD’s out of my Mac into the pt-ax200u onto a 92″ screen via a cheap DVI-HDMI cable and it’s like being at the movies. Playing HD content off of fox.com is even better than what you see at the theater no joke! You seriously have to see it to believe it. And it works as nice big monitor, even though it’s native 1280×720, it’ll do 1920×1080 which is actually more than my regular flat screen monitor. I do video production and I can’t use it to accurately monitor the color and luminance levels of my photoshop projects and video projects, but it’s nice when you want to just sit back on the couch and get the work done that doesn’t involve tweaking colors or brightness/contrast levels.
A COUPLE OF THINGS TO NOTE:
I tried to the point of almost killing myself to get this thing to work right with a laptop running vista and couldn’t get it to do the same thing twice, the problem might be on Vista’s end (big surprise) but it’s something to be aware of.
Also if you get it you SHOULD NOT ENABLE ECO-MODE RIGHT AWAY.
I did that thinking I’d extend the life of my lamp and after 30 or 40 hours of use and noticed extremely annoying flickering. After searching forums about it I read that your supposed to “burn in” the lamp for like the first 500 hours or something by leaving it in normal mode. I switched it to normal mode and after an hour or so of use the flickering went away and I haven’t seen it back since almost 50 hours later.
ALso be aware of the lens shift difference between LCD and DLP projectors, the lens on this thing can move around a decent amount verses a DLP projector which can barely move the lens, if at all.
So bascially it’s not a perfect projector, but it works great with everything, really shines with HD content and you can’t beat the price.