Mid-2000s Mitsubishi DLP rear-projection TVs (e.g., WD73727, WD52527) used branded processing - Plush1080p, DeepField, SharpEdge, PerfectColor and DLP LightEngine - to address color, contrast and edge clarity issues common in large-screen projectors. Today the market favors flat-panel 4K/OLED sets for mainstream living rooms; older Mitsubishi DLPs can still work for budget or secondary uses if you verify lamp life, inputs and condition.
Why Mitsubishi big-screen TVs stood out
In the mid-2000s Mitsubishi's large DLP rear-projection sets earned attention for bold color, deep contrast and large diagonal sizes at prices lower than same-size flat panels of the time. Models such as the 73-inch WD73727 and the 52-inch WD52527 were positioned as flagship and value options, respectively, and shipped with a suite of image-processing names intended to improve perceived sharpness and color fidelity.Key technologies (what the brand marketed)
- Plush1080p: a high-speed video processing pipeline Mitsubishi promoted to support full 1080p resolution and reduce motion artifacts.
- DeepField: a dynamic contrast/brightness optimization system intended to preserve detail in dark and bright scenes.
- SharpEdge / DefinEdge: edge-enhancement and sharpening features aimed at making foreground objects appear crisper against backgrounds.
- DLP LightEngine: the DLP projection subsystem (based on Texas Instruments' DLP technology) that produced image light and color in those rear-projection sets.
- PerfectColor and Dark Detailer: additional tuning that focused on color accuracy and shadow detail.
How this fits into today's TV market
Since then the mainstream TV market shifted decisively to flat-panel LCD/LED, QLED and OLED displays. Those newer panel technologies offer thin profiles, higher pixel densities (4K and now 8K), and different approaches to contrast and color (local dimming, quantum dots, and emissive OLED pixels). If you're researching an older Mitsubishi rear-projection model for a secondary space, it can still deliver a large image at a lower cost - but you should weigh trade-offs: bulk, panel brightness, input lag for gaming, and availability of modern inputs (HDMI 2.0/2.1) and smart-TV features.Practical buying guidance
- If you want large size on a budget and are looking at used DLP rear-projection sets, check color wheel noise, lamp life, pixel defects and HDMI compatibility.
- For a primary living-room set, favor current flat-panel TVs (4K HDR or OLED) for better resolution, apps, thinner form factor and energy efficiency.
- If preserving the Mitsubishi experience matters, compare any used WD-series model's condition and service history, and verify lamp/module replacement costs.
Bottom line
Mitsubishi's mid-2000s big-screen TVs introduced several digital-processing features to make large DLP images look sharper and more vibrant. They remain an interesting option for niche uses, but most buyers today will find more capable, compact and future-proof choices among current flat-panel TVs.- Confirm Mitsubishi's official exit or continuation in the consumer TV market and the year(s) of any discontinuation of DLP/rear-projection TV production. [[CHECK]]
- Verify exact specs and feature lists for WD73727 and WD52527 models (native resolution, lamp type, release year). [[CHECK]]
- Confirm whether feature names (Plush1080p, DeepField, SharpEdge, PerfectColor, Dark Detailer, DefinEdge) were used as described in marketing materials and document their technical meaning if available. [[CHECK]]
FAQs about Mitsubishi Big Screen Television
Are Mitsubishi WD-series big-screen TVs still good for modern viewing?
What did Plush1080p and DeepField actually do?
Is DLP technology inferior to modern LCD or OLED?
What should I check when buying a used Mitsubishi DLP TV?
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