Jack Vogel
03-16-2014, 05:41 PM
I'm trying to find a short throw projector that will allow me to display a looping video on the wall of an art gallery during its business hours without burning out the bulb.
My first thought was to plug the projector into a socket attached to a motion detector switch on a timer so that after 15 minutes of no one being in the room the projector would lose power and thus save the bulb. The disc feeding the video can just play on without concern since the video is on a loop. I realized the snag in this when I remembered that modern projectors don't have toggle switches, they must be turned on manually via a power button like a computer.
I could possibly resort to coming in every day and being the one to turn it on and off (the gallery is staffed by students who frankly can't be bothered to handle anything more complicated than opening and closing the doors and sitting at the front desk for a few hours) but are modern projectors tough enough that I could leave it on for a 12 hour stretch 5-6 days a week?
Does anyone have an easy solution for this conundrum?
My first thought was to plug the projector into a socket attached to a motion detector switch on a timer so that after 15 minutes of no one being in the room the projector would lose power and thus save the bulb. The disc feeding the video can just play on without concern since the video is on a loop. I realized the snag in this when I remembered that modern projectors don't have toggle switches, they must be turned on manually via a power button like a computer.
I could possibly resort to coming in every day and being the one to turn it on and off (the gallery is staffed by students who frankly can't be bothered to handle anything more complicated than opening and closing the doors and sitting at the front desk for a few hours) but are modern projectors tough enough that I could leave it on for a 12 hour stretch 5-6 days a week?
Does anyone have an easy solution for this conundrum?