JVC DLA-NZ700 vs Leica Cine 1 120
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Choosing between the JVC DLA-NZ700 and Leica Cine 1 120? Both compete in the Projector segment. Here’s how they compare across the specs that matter most for your home theater.
Pricing for both models is currently unavailable. Check the retailer links below for current deals.
Looking at overall performance dimensions: The JVC DLA-NZ700 scores higher in gaming performance. The Leica Cine 1 120 leads in value, video quality, form factor, room fit. They score similarly in ease of use.
The Leica Cine 1 120 offers higher brightness at 3000 ANSI lumens vs 2300, and different projection technologies (D-ILA vs DLP). More lumens means a brighter image, critical if you can't fully darken your room. Below 2000 lumens needs a dedicated dark room; 3000+ handles ambient light. In a dedicated dark room, contrast ratio and color accuracy may matter more than raw brightness.
The Leica Cine 1 120 holds an advantage across more performance dimensions, but the JVC DLA-NZ700 may still be the better pick depending on which specs matter most to your setup. See the detailed comparison table below for the full breakdown.
For most home theaters, the Leica Cine 1 120 is the stronger choice — it leads in 4 of 6 scored dimensions. The JVC DLA-NZ700 makes more sense if you prioritize the 1 dimension where it leads.
Performance Overview
Scores based on specs and category benchmarks (0–100 scale)
Detailed Specifications
| Specification | ||
|---|---|---|
| Price | N/A | N/A |
| Native Resolution | 4K | 4K |
| Technology | D-ILA | DLP |
| Throw Ratio Min | 1.26 | 0.25 |
| Throw Ratio Max | 2.01 | 0.25 |
| Lens Shift V | 70% | — |
| Lens Shift H | 28% | — |
| ANSI Lumens | 2300 | 3000 |
| CLO Lumens | — | — |
| Contrast Ratio | 80000:1 | 2000000:1 |
| HDR Support | HDR10+ | HDR10+, Dolby Vision |
| Input Lag | 35ms | 60ms |
| Lamp Life | 20000hrs | 25000hrs |
| Light Source | laser_phosphor | rgb_laser |
| Lens Quality | — | — |
| Tone Mapping | — | — |
| Ultra Short Throw | No | Yes |
| Chip Size | 0.69" | 0.47" |
| Color Depth | 12bit | 10bit |
| Zoom Ratio | 1.6 | — |
| Zoom Type | Motorized | Fixed |
| Focus Type | Motorized | Fixed |
| Noise (Normal) | 24dB | 32dB |
| Noise (Eco) | — | — |
| Power Draw | 280W | 300W |
| HDMI Inputs | 2 | 3 |
| HDMI Version | 2.1 | 2.1 |
| 3D Support | No | No |
| Built-in Speaker | No | Yes |
| Speaker Power | — | 30W |
| Wi-Fi | No | Yes |
| Bluetooth | No | No |
| Streaming Apps | No | Yes |
| Lens Memory | Yes | No |
| 12V Trigger | No | No |
| Ethernet | Yes | Yes |
| Frame Interpolation | Yes | No |
| Native Aspect | 16:9 | 16:9 |
Key Differences
- Contrast Ratio: JVC DLA-NZ700 at 80000:1 vs Leica Cine 1 120 at 2000000:1
- Throw Ratio Max: JVC DLA-NZ700 at 2.01 vs Leica Cine 1 120 at 0.25
- Throw Ratio Min: JVC DLA-NZ700 at 1.26 vs Leica Cine 1 120 at 0.25
- Technology: JVC DLA-NZ700 at D-ILA vs Leica Cine 1 120 at DLP
- Input Lag: JVC DLA-NZ700 at 35ms vs Leica Cine 1 120 at 60ms. Sub-20ms is excellent for gaming. Above 40ms feels sluggish. Only matters for interactive content — film and TV don't benefit from low input lag.
Which Should You Choose?
Choose JVC DLA-NZ700 if you want:
- + better input lag — sub-20ms is excellent for gaming
- + better noise (normal)
- + better power draw
Choose Leica Cine 1 120 if you want:
- + better throw ratio min
- + better ansi lumens — more lumens means a brighter image, critical if you can't fully darken your room
- + better contrast ratio
- + better lamp life
Specifications sourced from manufacturer datasheets and verified against retailer listings. Prices updated hourly from authorized retailers. Scoring uses our open methodology — products are never ranked, promoted, or suppressed based on affiliate commission rates.
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