- Cyber Security
Cyber Essentials vs Cyber Essentials Plus: Which Do You Need?
1 Jun, 2026

£722.60 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Epson Home Cinema V11HB72340 is the kind of projector that makes sense when you want a decent 1080p image without paying “proper cinema” money. For around £558 ex-VAT, you’re getting a mainstream LCD projector that should be well suited to meeting rooms, training spaces, and everyday presentations where you care more about reliability and picture quality than living-room “wow” contrast. In typical office lighting—lights on, windows not fully blocked—it should still be broadly usable, but it’s not the brightest thing in the world, so don’t expect miracles in a glare-heavy room.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it for high-traffic commercial use where rooms stay bright or where you need top-end brightness and contrast for large, daylight-facing setups. If your use case is mainly darkening the room a bit (even partially) and running content for a few hours at a time—training sessions, standard client presentations, internal videos—then it’s a sensible value option. If you’re buying for a boardroom with lighting that can’t be controlled, you may end up frustrated and wishing you’d spent more on a genuinely brighter model.

ViewSonic
ViewSonic X2000L-4K - DLP projector - laser/phosphor - 2000 ANSI lumens - 3840 x 2160 - 16:9 - 4K - white

BenQ
BenQ LH856UST - DLP projector - laser diode - 3D - 3500 ANSI lumens - Full HD (1920 x 1080) - 16:9 - 1080p - ultra short-throw lens

ViewSonic
1080p (1920x1080), 5000AL, 3,000,000:1 contrast, SuperColor technology, Laser Phosphor system, 3D compatible, TR1.4-2.24, 1.6x zoom, 24dB noise level(Eco), HDMI x2, HV keystone, Portrait Mode,IP6X Optical Engine, up to 30,000hrs Light Source Life

Epson
Epson EB-L520U - 3LCD projector - 5200 lumens (white) - 5200 lumens (colour) - WUXGA (1920 x 1200) - 16:10 - 1080p - LAN - white