Hello. So yesterday I just bought my new Acer Aspire V5-552g and it came with dolby home thatre v4. the problem is, I installed all the drivers from acer, including the dolby one but is not working. The audio driver is working, I can hear the sound, but dolby isnt. I checked if is turned on,it is, but isnt doing anything to improve the sound. Tried redownloading the drivers and reinstall but is not working.
Please help me.
If you check the taskbar/notification center do you see an Icon for DOLBY? When you hover over the icon should show Dolby Home Theater (ON). If this is not the case, then right-click the icon to view the available options and click ON.
You should also see an option to Play Demo. Listen to the demo. The demo demostrates the difference between ON and OFF. If you are still having problems, please try performing a factory restore to default settings. I would not recommend changing or updating the drivers after you perform the restore. Try using the system as it came from factory and make sure Dolby is on, then play the demo.
Dolby Home Theater v4 is only a software program that helps enhance the sound coming out of your speakers. There is no specific driver for the software itself. It is either On or Off. To further understand I took a similar model with the same setup as yours and tested the sound with and without speakers and that is how I was provide the above information about how to turn it on/off and how to listen to the demo.
Another thing I would check is make sure in the Dolby equalizer menu, you have both speakers and headphones selected. If those are also selected, then performing the restore as previously suggested would be my recommendation to rule out any software issues. If the problem persists, then there may be another problem and it would be best to contact technical service in yoru region for further assistance.
Dolby pioneered high-quality audio first in the recording studio and at the movies and then in the living room. Dolby Home Theater v4 benefits from decades of experience in areas like noise reduction, speaker optimization, and surround sound. It's a complete solution and improves audio performance whether you choose to listen through your PC's built-in speakers, your favorite pair of headphones, or by connecting your PC to a home theater system.
Designed into a PC, Dolby Home Theater v4 first applies processing that fixes any problems with the source material. It then fixes playback issues by compensating for mechanical constraints of the PC itself.
Because Dolby engineers custom-tune each PC model that includes Dolby Home Theater v4, the audio processing ensures that you enjoy optimal sound for the specific combination of speakers and amplifier in your PC.
The Surround Decoder in Dolby Home Theater v4 creates a surround sound experience by converting two-channel stereo audio into 5.1 channels and converting 5.1-channel audio into 7.1 channels.
Dolby Home Theater v4 is one of two Dolby technology suites that are part of the Dolby PC Entertainment Experience v4. Dolby Advanced Audio v2 is designed to deliver a personal surround sound experience.
Many home theater PC (HTPC) enthusiasts dream of a system that is as slim as other consumer electronic devices such as a dedicated Blu-ray player. It is also an expensive and difficult proposition for most; thus, when Acer introduced its newest Revo 100, many took notice. Not only is the Revo 100 only one inch high, it also has a unique slide-out keyboard/touchpad clearly designed as an input device for the ten-foot experience. With a sub-$600 retail price, the Acer Revo 100 which packs an AMD K325 CPU and NVIDIA ION GPU certainly deserves a closer look.
The Acer Revo RL100 is packaged neatly and well-protected in an easily opened cardboard box. The contents are housed in formed plastic. An easier to recycle formed cardboard insert is generally preferred by the eco-conscious. Inside the package are the following items:
The most striking aspect of the Revo RL100 out of the box, is its slim profile. At one-inch thick, it is even thinner than the Samsung Blu-ray player that was in our audio-video (A/V) cabinet where the Revo found a home throughout the evaluation. The black plastic construction feels solid except when applying pressure to the top center of the chassis. The layout of the ports seems logical for the most part, save for the headphone port; its location in the rear, makes it difficult to access in certain installations.
When using the included bracket, the RL100 can be oriented on its side which may fit some installations better than others. The bottom of the RL100 contains numerous stickers, logos and and chassis elements that make orienting the bottom towards a wall or cabinet desirable when installing vertically.. The stand provides a sturdy base and there is little danger that the Revo RL100 will tip over unless forced.
Powering on the RL100 and getting to the desktop takes approximately fifty seconds. Unfortunately, upon booting, we are presented with a plethora of programs that many will not need or want, but are taking up valuable resources in the background.
For those looking to playback 24p content at the proper refresh rate of 23.976 Hz into a display, the NVIDIA ION offers 23.971 Hz precision, so there will be an occasional frame drop unless time is taken to configure a custom resolution to achieve a more precise precision.
A common worry with lower-powered platforms like the Revo RL100 is whether it will be able to play back Netflix smoothly. With Silverlight 4, smooth performance has never been possible at the test location even on more powerful systems with Intel and NVIDIA graphics and the Revo RL100 seemed no worse though the system was taxed heavily and there was literally no headroom for any other processes that might need to be run in the background. Silverlight 5 RC performance on the higher-end Intel systems did clear up most judder, yet there still seems to be work to do on the ION platform because performance became unacceptably bad even for casual viewers on the Revo RL100 with video becoming a slideshow.
Checking out the Windows Experience Index (WEI) reveals a relatively modest system. Of course, the WEI only gives a rough estimation of how the system might perform, so more specific testing is needed to truly determine how useful the system is.
ShowAnalyzer (SA) is a tool often utilized by HTPC enthusiasts to analyze content and identify commercial breaks. It is also extremely system intensive. As we can see, the Revo is significantly slower than Intel parts that we have previously tested.
For HTPC use, connecting a USB CableCARD tuner such as the Hauppauge WinTV-DCR-2650 to the Revo RL100 is likely a common scenario. With two programs recording and viewing a recorded program, the CPU can barely keep up, but any other processes may destroy the experience.
We did encounter one unfortunate incompatibility with the Revo RL100 connected to a Samsung display via a Denon AVR-2112 AVR. With some recorded TV content, display synchronization issues occurred. These issues disappeared when bypassing the Denon AVR. The same recorded TV content could also be played back successfully with another HTPC connected to the Denon AVR.
The Acer Revo RL100 is an HTPC that we want to love. It sports an attractive aesthetic and has a clever design featuring the innovative touchpad/keyboard. The small size and included stand provide a great degree of flexibility.
If the occasional glitch can be tolerated and the use-case is for a system that only plays back one video at a time, the RL100 could be just the right match. Considering that the Revo RL100 includes Windows 7 Home Premium, Blu-ray playback capability and retails for less than $600, the value proposition seems favorable.
You may run into some performance issues if using Bit Torrent while streaming unless you tell the client not to try to consume all the available bandwidth. You will probably be okay with your other tasks. You just want to be prepared that there could be the occasional glitch and depending on exactly what you are doing, the resources used for playback (see commentary on Netflix streaming) could have the system on the brink.
The Acer H7850 is currently Acer's lowest-price 4K UHD home theater projector, at $1999 most places and (at the moment) $1699.99 on Amazon. This projector uses the 0.66" 4K UHD DLP chip and an RGBCY color wheel. In addition to 3840x2160 resolution, it offers HDR and a rated 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio. Moreover, it is ISF certified, so if you get it calibrated by an ISF technician, the choices for color modes will include ISF Day and ISF Night. For SDR material, the H7850 delivers appropriately fine detail for the resolution, color well within a realistic-looking range, dark blacks, and excellent contrast and three dimensionality. With HDR material it loses enough shadow detail in dark scenes to notice, but still delivers a compelling picture. Setup conveniences include the 1.6x zoom lens and vertical lens shift for placement flexibility. In addition, it is only 11.7 lbs., which makes the H7850 lighter and easier to handle than many 4K UHD projectors. Another key strength is that the H7850 is bright enough to fill very large screens. Even with optimized settings for video, it can light up a 190" 1.3-gain screen in a dark room. For brighter rooms or larger screens, it can deliver a quite usable image with enough brightness to boost the screen size to as much as 220" in a dark room or 140" with moderate light.
Acer H7850 Advantages/Features
- 3840x2160 resolution for crisp images and fine detail
- Frame Interpolation to smooth motion; choice of three levels
- 1.6x zoom lens
- Modest vertical lens shift
- Zoom and lens shift offer enough placement flexibility so you may be able to replace an older projector without having to move a ceiling mount
- 4000 hour lamp life in full power mode, 10,000 hours in Eco mode, 15,000 hours with ExtremeEco
- 2 HDMI ports, 1 with MHL
- Two 5-watt stereo speakers offer good sound quality and high enough volume to fill a small room
- HDR is compatible with Rec.2020 and HDR 10
- Supports ISF color calibration for ISF Day and Night modes (both become available after calibration, assuming you choose to pay to calibrate it)
- Replacement lamps are $70.42--a very low price--but only if you contact Acer Service; the lamp isn't available through the Acer online store, and it costs substantially more elsewhere
Acer H7850 Limitations
- No Keystone correction
- Only one HDMI 2.0 port (suitable for 4K HDR), and it is also the only one that supports MHL
- No 3D support
- Low brightness uniformity for the price
- Rainbow artifacts slightly more noticeable with HDR input than on competing 4K projectors
- Does not support Hybrid Log Gamma, the emerging HDR standard for broadcast TV
- Input Lag is 77 to 80 ms even with Frame Interpolation off, which serious gamers will consider too slow
- Warranty is only 1 year for the projector; 90 days for the lamp.
Acer H7850 Performance
Brightness. Acer rates the H7850 at 3000 lumens. We measured ANSI Lumens for our test sample with the zoom lens at its widest angle setting as follows in full power and Eco On modes:
Acer H7850 ANSI LumensMODEFull LampEco Mode Bright 27901877 Standard 18231226 Movie 1363 917 Dark Cin.1378927Game17481176Sports17231159Silentn/a**1133** Silent mode doesn't let you change the power setting
Low Lamp Mode. Eco mode reduces brightness by about 33% compared with full power mode. The specs also mention ExtremeEco, which isn't an Eco setting, but a power saving feature. According to Acer, if the projector doesn't detect a signal, it will shift to Eco lamp mode. Zoom Lens Light Loss. The 1.6x zoom lens drops brightness by 23% in the full telephoto setting. That's not unusual for this level of zoom, but it is enough to notice. For maximum brightness, you'll want to position the H7850 as close to the screen as possible for the screen size. Video Optimized Lumens (SDR). Movie mode with some slight tweaking gives the closest color match to our reference projector and no loss of brightness. Even with default settings, colors are nicely saturated and well within the realm of realistic; they are slightly blue shifted compared to a reference projector, but not enough to be noticeable. The H7850 also delivers good shadow detail as well as excellent contrast, three dimensionality, and black levels. Compared with the Optoma UHD60, for example, its black is ever so slightly darker, but by so little that the difference shows only in a side-by-side comparison. In a dark room, the measured 1360 lumens with video optimized settings can give you a bigger picture than you might have room for. It is enough to light up a 1.3-gain 190" screen, or a 1.0-gain 170" screen. Switching to Eco power mode, at 915 ANSI lumens, drops the sizes to 155" and 135", and also lets you move to Normal power mode as the lamp ages and loses brightness. For rooms with ambient light, the brightness in Normal power mode with video optimized settings is enough for a 1.3-gain 120" screen. For higher ambient light levels or larger screens, you'll need to use a brighter color preset mode. Color Preset Mode Performance. The H7850 delivers realistic-enough looking color and good enough contrast in most modes to be highly watchable even with default settings. As with many projectors, the exception is its brightest mode, which has an obvious yellowish-green bias. If you need the extra brightness however--to stand up to bright sunlight in a family room for example--you may be willing to use it on an occasional basis. Standard, the second brightest mode, has a slight blue shift, which most people find more acceptable than a green shift. In this case, the colors are well within the realm of realistic looking. However, Standard mode has lower contrast than Movie mode and appears slightly less three dimensional. Dark Cinema delivers a close color match to Movie mode, but with a different gamma setting that improves shadow detail separation just a touch, while lowering contrast in most scenes that aren't dark enough for shadow detail to matter. Game mode and Sports mode are similar to Dark Cinema, but with higher brightness. Silent mode is similar to Movie mode for color, but somewhat brighter with its one power setting than Movie mode with Eco On. Video Performance. The H7850 delivers solid video performance for the price. In addition to realistic color, dark blacks, and excellent contrast and three dimensionality with SDR input, it delivers appropriately fine detail for both native UHD and upscaled 1080p input. For even crisper images, it offers both Super Resolution and Sharpness settings that you can adjust to taste. If you crank them up too high, however, they will make minor skin imperfections look like a nasty rash. Video processing options also include AcuMotion--Acer's name for frame interpolation (FI)--with four settings, including Off. Even level 1 smooths motion almost entirely and removes judder from camera pans, but it also adds a noticeable digital video effect to film. If you find that bothersome, you might want to use it only for live and recorded video, including sports, where you're much more likely to consider it an enhancement. Like most DLP projectors, the H7850 shows occasional rainbow artifacts. In my tests, the only times I saw them often enough to be bothersome were in test clips chosen specifically because they tend to show rainbow artifacts. Unless you're particularly sensitive to them, they shouldn't be an issue. HDR Performance. The H7850 offers four HDR settings. Level 1 is closest to the spec, but far too dark--losing most shadow detail in dark scenes. Level 4 is the brightest and most watchable. For optimal viewing, I started with Level 4, changed the gamma setting, and adjusted color to remove a noticeably green bias. After the changes, the H7850 delivered a compelling image. The more important limitation for HDR with the H7850 is that it offers only one User mode, and any changes you make to the factory default settings in any preset color mode immediately get saved in User mode, and erase whatever was there before. So you are required to use the factory default settings for all color preset modes and reserve User mode for HDR, unless you want to recalibrate your preferred custom settings every time you switch between HDR and SDR. It is simply more work than you should have to do.Brightness uniformity. The H7850's brightness uniformity is 53% at the wide-angle end of the lens and 63% at the telephoto end, which is unexpectedly low for a home theater projector in this price range. With a solid white image, it is obviously brighter in the center than the sides and brighter at the bottom than the top. With film or video, the difference is much harder to see. Depending on how much low uniformity bothers you, you may consider this unacceptable at this price or may never notice it. On-board audio. Home theater projectors are normally used with external sound systems. But if you need the H7850's onboard audio, the two 5-watt stereo speakers deliver good sound quality and enough volume to fill a small room.Fan noise. Acer rates the H7850 at 26 dB in full power mode, 24 dB in Eco mode, and 19 dB with the Silent color preset. In quiet moments, you can hear the fan in both full power and Eco modes from anywhere in a mid-size room as a steady white noise. Both have a high-pitched overtone that makes them more noticeable than they otherwise would be, but Eco mode is quiet enough that it shouldn't bother most users. Silent mode eliminates the high-pitch component entirely and is quieter still, making it hard to hear from more than a foot or two away. Acer recommends using High Altitude mode at 5,249 feet and above. If you plan to run in full lamp mode at High Altitude you may want to consider setting the projector up with some sound deadening material around it. Input lag. The 77 to 80 ms input lag with FI off, and the even slower 145 ms with it on, makes the H7850 a poor choice for serious gamers. More casual users may find it adequate with FI off. Connection Panel Inputs: - (1) LAN
- (1) RS-232 (control)
- (1) HDMI 1.4
- (1) HDMI 2.0 with MHL
- (1) VGA/component in
- (1) VGA monitor out
- (1) 3.5mm stereo in
- (1) 3.5mm stereo out
- (1) USB A (power only)
- (1) 12V Trigger
- (1) USB Type A (Service only)
The H7850 also works with Acer's optional Wi-Fi Dongle and Wireless FHD kit, but they both support resolutions of only 1080p.
Setting up the Acer H7850Throw Distance. The H7850's throw distance for a 120" 16:9 image ranges from about 12'2" to 19'4". To find the throw distance range for the image size you want, see the Acer H7850 Projection Calculator. Lens offset. With the H7850 set up on a table, the lens shift allows the bottom edge of the image to be anywhere from even with the centerline of the lens to as much as 18% of the image height above the centerline. This range is ideal for setting up the projector on a low table or inverted in a ceiling mount. There is no keystone adjustment to square off the image, which means you should avoid any situation that forces you to tilt the projector up or down to hit the screen. This effectively rules out options like putting it on a high shelf behind the seats, which will usually force you to tilt it downward.
Competitive Comparison:
Acer H7850 vs. Optoma UHD60When comparing the Acer H7850 and the Optoma UHD60, we find that each has some advantages over the other. Brightness. The H7850 is the brighter of the two but not by much. The H7850's brightest mode measures 2790 ANSI lumens compared with 2710 for the UHD60. Its Movie and Dark Cinema modes are both about 1370 lumens compared with 1260 for the UHD60's Cinema mode. In their Eco modes, the H7850 reduces brightness by about 33% compared with 37% for the UHD60. (The UHD60 test unit had a persistent flicker in Eco mode. We saw a similar flicker with the H7850 when connected to a computer, but not with a Blu-ray player or FiOS, which makes it irrelevant for home theater use.)Brightness uniformity. The UHD60 has better brightness uniformity, measuring 64% at the wide angle end and 74% at the telephoto end, compared with only 53% and 63% for the H7850. SDR Image Quality. For SDR input the two projectors are a nearly even match for almost every aspect of image quality, with suitably neutral color, excellent contrast and shadow detail separation, and dark blacks. The H7850's black is slightly darker, but by so little you can't see the difference without a side-by-side comparison. HDR Image Quality. For HDR input the UHD60 has a significant advantage for holding shadow details, showing details in dark scenes that get lost with the H7850. The H7850 also adds digital noise in some scenes and shows rainbow artifacts a bit more frequently than the UHD60--two issues that did not show up with SDR input. The biggest advantage for the UHD60 for HDR is that it lets you easily maintain separate settings for HDR and SDR input without the risk of overwriting your customizations. With the H7850, you can define User mode for HDR, but as soon as you, say, tweak Movie mode for better color accuracy, the tweaked version becomes the User mode and the HDR settings are gone. With the UHD60, you can customize each color preset mode individually, including HDR mode. Frame Interpolation. The H7850 has frame interpolation while the UHD60 does not. You can step up to the Optoma UHD65 at $2299 if you want this feature on the Optoma. We have not done a comparison of the relative quality of the two implementations of FI on these units.Input Lag. The UHD60 has a lag of 63 ms compared with 77 to 80 ms on the H7850. Zoom and Lens Shift. The UHD60 has a 1.56x zoom, almost identical to the 1.6x zoom on the H7850. They have nearly the same lens shifts and vertical offsets. Weight. The UHD60 is a bit larger, at 16 lbs. compared with 11.7 lbs. on the H7850.Fan Noise. Both are very quiet, but the H7850 is the quieter of the two, with both set to full power or Eco modes. The UHD60 also lacks an equivalent to the H7850's Silent mode which drops the fan noise even further.
Our Take on the Acer H7850The Acer H7850 has a lot to like, with some limitations. Topping the list of strong points is its sharp, crisp 4K UHD resolution combined with color balance that's well within a realistic looking range--accurate enough that no calibration is required to get a thoroughly enjoyable image. For SDR input, it delivers solid blacks, separates shadow details well, and offers excellent contrast and three dimensionality. For HDR input, it loses some shadow detail separation and renders some shadows more solid black than it should, but it delivers a compelling picture otherwise.