Once the seats were in place, I spent some quality time sitting in them and envisioning the display area at the front of the room. I had planned to build a flexi-rack to accomodate all the electronics with the center channel speaker and plasma panel on top. I say "had" because after staring at the wall for awhile, I had a revelation: why not a projector? I had considered a projector a few months ago and dismissed the idea based on cost and thinking "do I really want to sit 10 feet from a 92-inch screen?" I found a white sheet and folded it so it would match the dimensions of a 92-inch, 16:9 screen (80" x 45"). I taped it up on the wall and had my wife join me for a look. After about 1 minute, she said "why can't we get a projector?" Honest, this really happened. This is a milestone in WAF (wife acceptance factor) history.
I do plan more detailed reports on the projection setup in the near future but for now, here is the updated gear list:
Panasonic AE2000U LCD projector
Carada 92" Brilliant White screen (1.4 gain)
Panasonic BD30 Blu-ray player (just arrived today in fact)
Oppo 980 DVD player
Lumagen Vision HDP video processor
Onkyo TX-SR805 surround receiver
Axiom Epic 60 surround speaker system
As you can see, the seating makes a real difference in how you perceive a viewing environment. Because of my experience, I recommend making chairs among the first purchases. I originally designed this room around a purpose: ultimate sound and light control to allow me to choose any display I wished. The seating really changed my vision from a viewing room into a screening room. Oh yes, the cost, I did mention that earlier. It seems that the sub-$3000 portion of the projector market is white-hot right now. Epson, Panasonic, Sanyo, Mitsubishi and Optoma all have superb units boasting full 1080p and excellent image quality. Thanks to the information at Projector Reviews.com, I chose the Panasonic. My choice of the Carada screen was based on quality for the money. The reviews on it were all exemplary and the value is the best in the business. You can read more about there products here.
I'd better end this article before I get too far off topic. My advice: choose your seating and get it in your theater before you commit to any display. You may find the chairs will tell you how the rest of the room should be done. Thanks for reading and enjoy the view!
Thanks for the info. We are considering the same unit. I think we are sold!
ReplyDeleteWell written article.
ReplyDeleteHi Chris....I work for the TheaterSeatStore and love the pictures of the seats....would you mind if we used them in a new section we are adding to the site which is essentially a gallery of our customer's home theaters. It is one of the best pics that I have seen for the Charlize. My email is sales@theaterseatstore.com and my name is Bruce Tucker. Or i can be reached at 888-602-7328 ext 0 and just ask for me. All information in the gallery would be anonymous...just great pictures like this.
ReplyDeleteLocate display height for ideal viewing from as many seats as possible but with particular attention to the main seating. It is most desirable to look straight into the center of the display while seated. In a true theatre seating arrangement it is more desirable to step up rear seating by 6” than to raise the screen.
ReplyDelete