
Epson
Epson V11HA90120-N LS800 4K Ultra Short Throw Projector (Renewed)
★★★★★
4K
4,000-lumen laser brightness and 4K PRO-UHD resolution in an ultra-short-throw form factor that fits against the wall where a projector screen used to be impossible.
$1,999.99*$2,215.21Save 9%
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*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jul 14, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.
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Overview
Key Features
Item Package Quantity - 1
Product Type - VIDEO PROJECTOR
Specifications
Model
V11HA90120-N (Renewed)
Type
Ultra Short Throw 3-Chip 3LCD Smart Streaming Laser Projector
Resolution
4K PRO-UHD
Brightness
4,000 Lumens
HDR Support
Yes
Maximum Screen Size
150" Class
Operating System
Android TV
Built-in Audio
2.1ch Yamaha Speakers
Color
Black
Condition
Renewed
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- Laser light engine eliminates lamp replacement costs and delivers consistent brightness throughout the projector's lifespan without the color shift or lumen depreciation of lamp-based units.
- Ultra-short-throw design projects up to 150 inches from a placement of just a few inches off the wall, enabling large-screen installations in rooms where throw distance would otherwise prohibit it.
- 4,000 lumens provides usable image brightness in non-blacked-out environments — a significant step above budget UST projectors in the 2,500-lumen range.
- Built-in Android TV removes the need for an external streaming device for the majority of home theater use cases.
- Built-in 2.1ch Yamaha speaker system provides functional audio for casual use without requiring immediate external speaker integration.
👎 Cons
- As a consumer home theater projector, the LS800 lacks professional signal inputs (SDI, DisplayPort) and production features (genlock, 3D LUT calibration inputs) that video engineers would need for color-critical monitoring work.
- Ultra-short-throw optics require precise placement relative to the screen surface — even small variations in distance or vertical angle produce visible geometric distortion and require keystone correction.
- Android TV's open app ecosystem means software stability can vary; system updates and app compatibility are not managed with the same rigor as dedicated media players or pro video gear.
- At full 4K HDR workloads, the LS800 generates meaningful fan noise — a trade-off that is noticeable in quiet dialog-heavy scenes.
- Renewed unit availability and warranty terms vary by seller; light engine hours and prior usage history are not always disclosed.
Frequently Asked Questions
What inputs does the LS800 support, and how does that affect source compatibility in a home theater or presentation setup?
The LS800 runs Android TV as its operating system, meaning most streaming sources are handled natively via apps. For external sources, HDMI inputs are the connection path — this is a consumer home theater projector, not a production monitor with SDI, DisplayPort, or genlock capabilities. Plan your source routing accordingly.
How does 4,000 lumens of laser brightness translate to ambient-light performance?
4,000 ANSI lumens from a laser light source is sufficient for use in rooms with controlled but not blacked-out ambient light — a living room with curtains drawn, for example. Full daylight viewing is still problematic at any screen size, but the laser's higher contrast and consistent brightness over the lamp's life give it a meaningful advantage over equivalent-lumen lamp projectors in mixed-light conditions.
What screen size does the ultra-short-throw lens realistically support in a standard room?
The LS800 projects up to 150-inch class images from a distance of only a few inches from the wall. In practice, placement is constrained by the need for a flat, light-colored surface — most users deploy it with a dedicated ALR (Ambient Light Rejecting) screen designed for ultra-short-throw use to maximize contrast and uniformity.
This is a Renewed unit — what does that mean for reliability and what should a buyer expect?
Renewed means the unit was returned, inspected, and recertified. Laser light engines have no lamp replacement cycle and are rated for tens of thousands of hours, so a renewed laser projector with an intact light engine carries lower risk than a renewed lamp projector. That said, buyers should verify the warranty terms on the renewed listing and confirm the light engine hours if disclosed.
Does the LS800 support HDR, and what formats?
Yes — the LS800 supports 4K PRO-UHD with HDR. For specific HDR format compatibility (HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision), refer to Epson's official specification sheet, as HDR format support can vary by firmware version on Android TV-based projectors.