Johnny, Being able to feel the bass..... ah yes, this is what attracted me to home theater so long ago. It can be achieved in a variety of ways, but what is needed varies according to the cubic feet of volume in your room. Larger rooms require more "woofage." There are several ways...
Yeah, if you have pretty speakers and want to show them off, putting them behind the screen is self-defeating. You'll have to allow for room. Maybe you could put your speakers in the room at the front end, and then use blue painter's tape to mark off the biggest screen dimension you can. See...
An interesting idea, Bill, especially since he has so much "length." He could build a false-wall and place speakers behind the screen. Or as another cool possibility, use the space for an infinite baffle sub. ;-) But in either case, this would allow you to use the entire 10' width for screen...
BRAGGING RIGHTS. That's about it. There are MANY options MUCH cheaper that will produce off-the-chain results in terms of both sound quality and quantity. Even some very exotic cabinet options available much cheaper (like the nOrh 9.0 which is in a solid marble cabinet). Much of the...
Is it possible you have a medical problem with your hearing? Tinnitis? It may have nothing to do with your gear at all, or your ears may be hyper-sensitive to certain frequencies. Do other listeners experience the same issues, or is it just you?
You? Hehe... just kidding. But seriously, the answer depends on your relationship dynamics. If she usually gets what she wants, then you're just going to have to make some lemonade or try to find a way to include her in the decision so moving it to a better spot becomes her idea. You could...
Here are a couple of ideas for you. As far as screen size goes, I'd suggest going just as large as you possibly can within your space. If you need space on either side of the screen to accommodate tower speakers, for example, you'll be limited to 8' wide on the screen (or so). Just figure...
Hi Ted, I decided on an interim stage. I painted the projection wall Flat Black (using Behr paint, IMO it's the best for getting good coverage in 1-2 coats with dark colors). I also painted the first 1/3 of the side walls flat black. The back 2/3 will be painted another color later on...
Hello Werner, I wish there was an easy answer to this questoin, but I think the correct answer is, "there's a home theater for almost every budget." I've seen home theaters that were stupidly lavish in excess of $100,000 USD, and some very basic that were less than $400 USD all-in with...
that looks really great! I'll bet the view from the back seat is now very good. :-) How high did you decide to make it? Looks like 6-8"? The rope lights under the lip for nice down-lighting add a very nice effect. Some wow factor as well as safety for your back-row guests...
Yeah, to pile on to what Mike is saying, wood glue is overkill IMO. If you are using enough screws, this should be very secure and stable without glue, and you'll be able to disassemble at some future point much easier if you decide to sell the home or make a change. He is also right that...
Good luck! You can cut costs by using 2x4's as ribs and hang them with deck hanging brackets onto the outer side of the box, but I've always been happier spending a little extra coin so that the ribs rested on the floor (same height as the outer box). When I went to a 20" riser, 2x20 was...
OK, assuming that I'm going to be doing some soundproofing in the ceiling and I don't want holes in the ceiling, I'm thinking about wall and celiing colors and lighting. My first instinct is the paint the projection wall a flat black and do the ceiling in either the same flat black or maybe...
Hello Aslam! I think I can help, since I have built three risers now for three separate home theaters. I'll give you a pretty simple plan that I hope you can follow. You need to decide how High your riser should be. I'd recommend 8-10". For the purposes of this, let's say it's going...
John, IMO, an in home audition is much better than an in store one. The environment changes the way speakers sound so there's not surefire way of knowing how they sound if you don't audition in your home. Most ID companies give you 30 days to try the speakers in your house. Many better...
Adam, Thanks for the reply, and the pics of how you're doing your ceiling with the clips and channel give me some perspective. I have two bedrooms above the theater, so making in quieter would be good. have you considered using Green Glue between your two layers of drywall to improve the...
QuietRock looks like an interesting soundproofing product. Thinking about this for my ceiling after doing just a little bit of reading. Have you considered this? Any word on whether this is actually good or just marketing?
Here's a link with some "sales" information...
Wow, Brian, this looks like a great space.
Are you planning to build seating risers for a second row? I've done this before with great success.
Also, I'm curious about your plans for the floating ceiling. How would you accomplish this? I know you've seen my other thread about...
Brian, Thanks for the thoughts. I'll google this stuff, but i'm assuming that Isolation Decouplers are something that goes between Sheetrock and stud to absorb vibrations? Is MLV and Cellulose Insulation some kind of sound-absorbing material I'd spray or install between the floor...
For bang-per-buck sound quality, I'd look at Axiom (mentioned above), nOrh (look at the drums, though they are not floorstanders), Ascend Acoustics. Swan and AV123 ELT series floorstanders are great (though AV123 is now defunct, you might still be able to find some on the used market). the...
Hi everyone, I just moved into a new house, and it's time to build the HT in the basement. I've got 8' ceiling height, space is about 11' x 33'. Drop ceiling. Lighting in the area is also controlled by a separate switch already. I have a white drop ceiling in place, and if I removed it...
Hi John, As Jason says, the projector is a monitor. You won't be connecting audio to the Projector. Here's how to set it up without using HDMI: Source (likely some kind of DVD player). Connect highest quality video out from the source to similar video input on your Receiver. Connect...