- Azure Cloud
Azure Backup vs Third-Party Backup: Which Should You Use?
11 Mar, 2026






£573.64 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The BenQ MX560 is the kind of “just works” office projector you buy when you don’t want drama—bright enough for typical meeting rooms/classrooms, with a straightforward, practical DLP image that’s usually forgiving on day-to-day use. At ~£478 ex-VAT, it’s good value if your priority is visibility and reliability over trying to make it a home-cinema vibe. It suits teams that need a dependable standard-throw setup for PowerPoints, spreadsheets, training sessions, and general presentations where you want readable text without fiddling too much with settings every week.
That said, it’s not the choice I’d make if you’re chasing best-in-class image quality in a more demanding environment—dark rooms, very fine detail, or presentations where colour accuracy and contrast are critical. Also, if you’re routinely projecting from awkward distances, double-check throw distance and mounting options before committing; “standard throw” is usually fine, but it’s worth matching the room layout rather than assuming it’ll fit. If you’ve got a typical UK meeting room setup and want a cost-effective, commercial workhorse, this is a solid pick. If your room or content demands more, you’ll likely end up wanting a step up.

Epson
Epson EB-L795SE - 3LCD projector - 7000 lumens - WUXGA (1920 x 1200) - 16:10 - 802.11a/b/g/n/ac wireless / LAN/ Miracast - black

Asus
ASUS H1 - DLP projector - RGB LED - 3D - 3000 lumens - Full HD (1920 x 1080) - 16:9 - 1080p - black

Epson
Epson EB-L210SW - 3LCD projector - 4000 lumens (white) - 4000 lumens (colour) - 16:10 - 802.11a/b/g/n/ac wireless / LAN/ Miracast - white

Epson
Epson EH-TW6250 - 3LCD projector - 2800 lumens (white) - 2800 lumens (colour) - 3840 x 2160 (3 x 1920 x 1080) - 16:9 - 4K - 802.11ac wireless - black / white - Android TV