โš  Advertorial. DiskHead earns a commission when you buy via our links. This does not affect our editorial independence. Affiliate Disclosure
DiskHead Find Your TV โ†’
Advertorial Technology Updated: April 2026 8 min read

Are Projectors Better Than TVs? A Beginner's Guide

DiskHead Editorial Team
Updated April 2026 ยท 8 min read
Optoma 4K UHD home projector

The question comes up constantly: should I buy a TV or a projector? It sounds like a simple comparison, but it's actually the wrong question. A better way to frame it is: what experience do you want, and where do you want it? The honest answer is that projectors and TVs do different things well โ€” and understanding where each excels will help you make the right choice the first time.

Short answer: TVs win on versatility, brightness and convenience. Projectors win on screen size, immersion and value above 85 inches. For most living rooms, a TV is the right choice. For a dedicated home cinema, a projector is hard to beat.

How projectors work

At its simplest, a projector takes a video signal and converts it into a beam of precisely shaped light, which it then projects onto a surface โ€” ideally a dedicated screen. What makes modern projectors interesting is the sophistication of that process. Unlike early projectors that simply amplified a bulb through a slide, today's units use advanced imaging chips to process video frame-by-frame, apply HDR tone mapping, and deliver colour accuracy that rivals a premium TV.

The two dominant imaging technologies you'll encounter are DLP (Digital Light Processing) and 3LCD. Each has distinct characteristics.

๐Ÿ”ต

DLP โ€” Digital Light Processing

Millions of tiny mirrors on a single chip

DLP projectors direct light onto a chip covered in microscopic mirrors, each representing one pixel. The mirrors tilt thousands of times per second to control how much light reaches each part of the image. A spinning colour wheel sequences the red, green and blue light components.

Best for: High contrast, sharp edges, compact units, gaming (low input lag), budget buyers.

Watch out for: "Rainbow effect" โ€” brief colour fringing visible to some viewers when bright objects move across a dark background.

๐ŸŸฃ

3LCD โ€” Liquid Crystal Display

Three separate panels, one per colour channel

3LCD projectors split incoming light through a prism into three beams โ€” red, green and blue โ€” each of which passes through its own dedicated LCD panel before being recombined by a lens. No colour wheel is required, which eliminates rainbow artefacts entirely.

Best for: Accurate colour, family viewing, smooth gradients, uniformly bright images.

Watch out for: Larger physical size and typically higher price points than equivalent DLP models.

Light sources: lamp, LED and laser

The imaging chip defines the character of the picture; the light source defines its brightness, longevity and running costs. This distinction matters more than most buyers realise.

๐Ÿ’ก

Traditional Lamp

Lowest upfront cost. Excellent colour depth and "warm" image character. Typical lifespan of 3,000โ€“5,000 hours before the image noticeably dims. Replacement bulbs cost ยฃ50โ€“ยฃ150.

๐Ÿ”ฆ

LED

Found in compact and portable projectors. Very long lifespan (20,000+ hours), cool running, silent fans. Brightness is limited โ€” typically best for bedroom or gaming room use rather than a main cinema.

โšก

Laser

The premium standard. Instant on/off, consistent colour throughout its 20,000+ hour life, and sufficient brightness for living room use. Higher upfront cost but zero ongoing bulb expenses.

Projector vs TV: the honest comparison

Both formats have real strengths, and the right choice is always determined by your specific situation. Here's where each genuinely wins.

Where a TV beats a projector

Where a projector beats a TV

The practical verdict: If you need one device to handle news, everyday TV and daytime use, get a TV. If you want a dedicated big-screen experience for films and events in a room you can dim, a projector delivers extraordinary value.

Understanding throw distance

Throw distance is the measurement from the projector lens to your screen surface. It directly determines how large your image will be at any given distance, and it's calculated using the projector's throw ratio.

A throw ratio of 1.5:1 means you need 1.5 metres of distance for every metre of screen width. So a 2.2-metre-wide screen (approximately 100 inches diagonal) needs the projector 3.3 metres away. Most manufacturers publish a throw calculator on their website โ€” always verify your room dimensions before purchasing.

๐Ÿ“

Long Throw

Needs 3โ€“5 metres for a 100" image. Best for large, dedicated cinema rooms. Can be ceiling-mounted.

๐Ÿ“

Short Throw

Needs 1โ€“2 metres for a 100" image. Great for smaller rooms. Can sit on a shelf or coffee table.

๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ

Ultra Short Throw

Needs under 50cm for 100" image. Sits on a sideboard directly below the screen. No ceiling mount needed.

Resolution and why it matters more on large screens

On a 55-inch TV viewed from 2.5 metres, the difference between 1080p and 4K is real but subtle. Scale that same image up to 120 inches and the gap becomes obvious โ€” fine detail stays crisp in 4K while 1080p begins to look soft when you're within 3 metres of the screen.

Note that not all "4K projectors" are equal. True native 4K uses a full 8.3 million pixel imaging chip. Pixel-shifting 4K (common in the mid-range) uses a 1080p or 2K chip that shifts the pixels rapidly to simulate 4K detail. Both produce noticeably better results than native 1080p at large screen sizes, but native 4K is the sharper of the two.

How to set up a projector

Modern projectors are significantly easier to set up than their reputation suggests. Most include two key alignment features that eliminate the need for precise physical positioning:

Connectivity is equally straightforward. Most current projectors have HDMI 2.1 inputs, which handle 4K at 120Hz for gaming. Many also include built-in streaming platforms (Android TV or similar), so you don't need a separate streaming device.

Getting the best image: Even a modest projector on a dedicated white screen looks dramatically better than the same projector pointed at a magnolia wall. A ยฃ100โ€“ยฃ200 fixed-frame screen is the single best upgrade for any projector setup.

Ready to buy? Projectors at Argos

Browse our selected picks currently available at Argos โ€” all with home delivery or Click & Collect.

Hisense C2TUK Ultra 4K Laser Projector
Hisense C2TUK Ultra 4K Laser Projector

Triple-laser ยท 4K UHD ยท Built-in JBL speaker ยท No installation required

View at Argos โ†’
Affiliate link โ€” we may earn a commission
Optoma Photon Life PK31 4K Projector
Optoma Photon Life PK31 4K UHD Projector

4K UHD ยท 900 lumens ยท Compact & portable ยท HDR support

View at Argos โ†’
Affiliate link โ€” we may earn a commission
Acer H6815BD 4K DLP Projector
Acer H6815BD 4K UHD DLP Projector

4K UHD DLP ยท 4,000 lumens ยท Long throw ยท Great for dedicated cinema rooms

View at Argos โ†’
Affiliate link โ€” we may earn a commission
Browse all projectors at Argos โ†’
Affiliate link โ€” we may earn a commission