I've seen 4 15,000 lumen Christie projectors with 2000:1 contrast stacked together. I've seen 4 15,000 lumen Christie projectors with 2000:1 contrast stacked together.
As a head's up, the 15K Christie projectors are a very different type of projector than what you plan to use. The Epson Powerlite1960 is a consumer-grade table-top projector with no lens shift (
Epson Powerlite 1960 manual) so regardless of contrast stacking 3 of them is going to take some work to get an acceptable blend.
Is that an issue and should I get the projector which has geometric correction on-board, or are stuff like that generally done in VJing programs anyway and so wouldn't make difference when using with Resolume? It seems I'll need to be doing blending in Resolume with any projector in this price range, but wanted to know what's the case with geometric correction (for stacking).
I personally never use projector's on-board geometric correction options. I do all my work either in software such as Resolume or with a dual-output Barco ImagePro II. When available, tyically projectors' on-board adjustement are not precise enough unless you use high-end projectors (such as the 15K Christies you saw in your video)
Can I do geometric correction on the projectors, but blending on Arena? I'll explain why I'm asking below.
Stacking doesn't involve blending at all. You blend projectors when your images are overlapping to create a larger image than what your projectors can do.
The ideal stack is two (or three in your case) projectors perfectly lined up physically with no geometric correction and with
all the pixels that match. Any area where pixels don't line up precisely will look muddy. If you do any geometric correction (on-board or software, it will get muddy because your image will be scaled onto your native resolution so not all pixels will be used (video black).
Keep in mind that the moment you move one corner of your image one pixel in any direction, your image gets some amount of distortion to trick your eyes into believing that the image is right. That's what mapping is all about! It all looks great from enough distance but if you walk up to the projected surfaces it won't look clean.
One question though, can I blend 3 1024x768 videos if my PCs monitor is only 1920x1080? If not, how do people do it?
Yes and there is plenty of how-to posts in this forum.
And how CPU/GPU intensive is doing geometric correction for 3 projectors in software (Arena)?
That's a question for the Resolume team but I don't think it's very intensive.
Can you even do 3 separate geometric correction?
Yes, no problem! I did an installation a few months ago with 15 projectors and each one of them was mapped onto the architecture.
How will 3 different video signals be sent from the PC to each projector?
You'll need 4 outputs (1 UI + 3 projectors). If you have less than 4, you'll need a way to split one output into what you need (Matrox D2G or T2G, Datapath X4, MST Hub, etc...)
Keep in mind that in theory, you could do a stack by splitting an output in however many projectors you have in your stack. That's what I do when I work in theatres where there is enough space to stack two projectors behind an RP screen. To split my output, I use a dual-output Barco ImagePro II. I take one signal and split it into two independent outputs that I can manipulate individually. It works great but the Barco hardware is super expensive (~$12,500) so it's probably not something you'll be able to use for this project.