At first viewing, the green of a football pitch looked sickly and artificial on default setting. Later, when later switching over to a cartoon, the colour palette was oversaturated and needed more changes. The colour controls need regular changing. The 530W is well connected with two HDMI ports (many smaller projectors reduce this to one which can be annoying), a USB port that can house a streaming stick, and an SD card slot. On this unit, I regularly encountered an issue of switching to an HDMI input and the unit telling me there was "weak or no signal". This was always solved by removing and reinserting the HDMI input so I initially thought it may have been that I’d just not connected the cable correctly – but I later had this when restarting the unit having not touched the cables when it had run fine before. A Google for this issue and projector hasn’t turned up mentions in other reviews, from customers or publications, so it may just be a fault within the individual unit, but it did cause a little concern. ![]() ![]() The design of the Leisure 530W is striking, smooth, and compact smaller than most home projectors, bigger than truly portable projectors or outdoor projectors but a size you could easily pop in a bag to take elsewhere. It’s made of hardwearing plastic with a useful amount of top-mounted controls, and a lightweight remote (without backlight).
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