Epson TW9400 4K Projector
- Location
- VIC, AU
- Seller
- evil c
- Source
- StereoNET
- Posted
- 28 Nov 2024
- Last seen
- 2d ago
RADAR is a price search engine. We link to the original listing — we never sell direct. Transactions happen on the source site.
RADAR is a price search engine. We link to the original listing — we never sell direct. Transactions happen on the source site.
Epson TW9400 4K Projector Epson TW9400 4K Projector These are every bit as good as all the reviews suggest, and l was in no hurry to offload this until a recent opportunity came up to spend considerably more, to marginally improve on this! https://www.whathifi.com/reviews/epson-eh-tw9400 It has been a fantastic performer in my system, and is in top condition. Tony from Clarity Calibration tweaked this unit a few years ago, so just setup and forget. My family are still amazed how sharp and rich the picture quality is! This includes streaming Netflix or Prime, the results are very impressi
If it’s genuinely unknown condition, A$2,300 is a bit firm rather than a bargain, because clean used EH-TW9400s tend to sit around the low-to-mid A$4,000s new and typically much lower on the used market; this asking price is roughly half new, but still only makes sense if the lamp hours, optics, and remote are all in good shape. Without more detail, I’d treat it as fair-to-ambitious rather than a steal.
That said, this is a well-liked home-theatre projector for a reason: strong contrast, 2,600-lumen brightness, lens shift/zoom flexibility, and Epson’s easy setup make it a very practical big-screen buy. If it’s from an attentive owner with low hours and included accessories, the upside is real. I’d want confirmation of lamp hours, any dust blobs, and whether the original remote and ceiling mount bits are included before calling A$2,300 compelling.
Independent perspective — not a price guarantee. Always verify condition, accessories and provenance before purchase.
Epson is a Japanese company that traces its roots to 1942, when Daiwa Kogyo was established in Nagano, Japan; it later became Seiko Epson, the name under which the brand is now known globally. The company’s heritage is in precision imaging and electronics rather than traditional hi-fi, so it does not come from the classic audio-manufacturing lineage of turntable, amplifier, or speaker specialists.
In the audio and AV world, Epson is best known for projectors, especially home-theater and installation models, including its Pro Cinema and Home Cinema ranges. Those products often include audio inputs and output support for integration, but Epson is not generally associated with building core hi-fi separates such as amplifiers, DACs, headphones, cables, or loudspeakers. Its audio relevance is therefore secondary to its larger projection business.
In market terms, Epson sits in the mainstream to upper-mid consumer AV segment, with a strong reputation for value, brightness, and practical features rather than audiophile exclusivity. It is best understood as a trusted technology brand for home cinema and presentation rather than a high-end hi-fi label, and it is not a vintage-collector or niche boutique name in audio.
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