Vistech showcased its latest LED display systems at InfoComm 2026, highlighting indoor and outdoor solutions utilizing MicroLED in Package (MIP) and Chip-on-Board (CLB) technologies. The company exhibits a range of displays designed for home cinema, stage rentals, commercial signage, and virtual production environments. To explore their full range of commercial display systems, visit www.vistechdisplay.com.
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For high-end indoor installations, Vistech presented a 0.8 mm pixel pitch CLB home cinema system. This integrated solution, valued at approximately $40,000, incorporates the LED screen, steel structure brackets, driver components, and integrated speakers. Additionally, the company displayed a 55-inch indoor MIP screen featuring a 0.9 mm pixel pitch and a brightness rating of 1,000 nits, tailored for high-definition close-up viewing.
For outdoor and rental applications, the lineup includes a 1.9 mm pixel pitch outdoor CLB screen capable of right-angle and cubic configurations for stage designs. Vistech also demonstrated a curved outdoor CLB display with a 1.5 mm pixel pitch, divided into four segments. This curved system is designed specifically to support spatial and augmented reality applications, as well as virtual production environments.
The booth hosted collaborative testing with SceneSync, a virtual production workflows developer, to evaluate camera-to-screen synchronization. Using specialized camera systems and an iPad control application, engineers calibrated camera frame rates and shutter angles to align with the LED wall’s refresh rate. This alignment is critical for avoiding color lines and flicker artifacts when filming at 24, 30, 60, and 120 frames per second.
The integration of high-density LED walls in virtual production allows for resolutions up to 8K. Implementing genlock synchronization directly between the camera sensor and the LED controller ensures precise timing, which is vital when filming high-speed motion. This setup supports real-time rendering pipelines, such as Unreal Engine, enabling studios to capture actors in front of high-fidelity virtual backdrops.



