Archive for December, 2009

Several Tips On Choosing The Best Home Theater System

December 31st, 2009

A home theater, to put it very simply, is arranging a variety of electronic components in order to make you feel that you are really watching a movie in a movie theater. Watching a movie on a home theater system is not at all like watching it on an ordinary television.

Basically, the kind of home theater you will have will depend largely on your budget. Your home entertainment system could be upgraded into a simple home theater system just by adding some extra speakers as well as some other rather inexpensive components. Here are also several reasons why you might want to consider a home theater system:

1. In your own home theater system, you can ask people to be quiet without any qualms of being beat up.
2. You can take off your shoes and feel comfortable when you are at home with your own home theater.
4. You don’t have to put up with screaming children when you view something on your own home theater system.

These are just some of the benefits of having your own home theater system.

Home Theater Design: Optimum Speaker Placement

December 30th, 2009



The standard theater arrangement is of course a screen at one end of the room, with one central speaker, one speaker to each side of the screen, two speakers providing surround left and right, and sometimes a speaker providing surround rear. If you have your room arranged this way, chances are good that you call it your home theater, and speaker placement is fairly straightforward for you. The ideal placement has the front speakers at the same height from the ground, usually either slightly above or slightly below the display, and the surround speakers at least 60cm above the heads of the viewers.

The front center speaker should ideally be in the same position as the screen; the front left and right speakers should be placed approximately 25 degrees to the left and right of the direction the viewers face, and about the same distance from the viewers; the surround left and surround right speakers should be 90 degrees to the left and right of this direction, and, again, about the same distance from the viewers; and the surround rear, as its name suggests, should be directly behind the viewers. A subwoofer if used can theoretically be placed anywhere in the room.

For many people, and I include myself in this, the design of your home is such that it does not comfortably permit a room set up in this way. After all, unless you are very lucky, the chances are that the room that contains your home theater equipment doubles as your living room, and you will not want it to be dominated by a screen. You may not wish to call it your home theater as such. To solve this problem, you need to draw a scale diagram of your room. Add your intended screen placement to the drawing, along with the seating arrangements (your sofas and chairs), and identify where people will be sitting when they watch movies, and the direction in which they will be looking.

The next thing you need to do is to draw a line from each viewer directly to the screen, which shows the direction in which each viewer faces. Then draw a line angled 25 degrees to the left of the line you have just drawn from the viewer, for each viewer, until it meets the wall. If the speaker is placed anywhere along that line, then it will be at the correct angle for the appropriate viewer. You need to identify a point along the wall fairly close to the position at which these lines reach the wall. This will usually be somewhere near the middle of the collection of lines. You have then identified the optimum home theater placement for your front left speaker.

You now need to do the same thing, but angle the lines 25 degrees to the right of the direction in which the viewers face. With these lines you can identify the optimum home theater placement for the front right speaker.

Repeat for lines angled 90 degrees to the left, 90 degrees to the right, and 180 degrees (a continuation of the line from viewer to screen, but in reverse). With these lines, you can identify the optimum home theater placement for the surround left speaker, the surround right speaker, and the surround rear speaker.

Ideally, the front left and right speakers should be placed at the same distance from each viewer, as should the surround left and right speakers. This will normally not be possible to achieve, so it should be approximated. Far more important are the speaker placement angles for each viewer, which should ideally not be more than about 15 degrees away from the optimum position. Optimum home theater speaker placement depends on minimizing the angle error for each viewer.

Your subwoofer could be placed theoretically at any point in the room, because the ear cannot easily determine the direction of low-frequency sounds. However, you may find that positioning the subwoofer at different parts of the room change the sounds from the subwoofer; some frequencies may be amplified, while others may be reduced, especially if the subwoofer is placed near a wall or corner of the room. It is suggested that you experiment with the placement of your subwoofer until you find a position that you like.

Some other considerations may affect the position in which you place the speakers. You will not want your speakers in a position where they obstruct a path that is regularly walked through, e.g. too close to a doorway. Also, if you do not have magnetically-shielded front speakers, they should not be placed too close to a cathode ray tube (old-style) TV, because they will cause the color purity of the display to be affected. This does not apply to LCD or plasma televisions. Using this approach, you can successfully place your speakers in such a way that you can be proud of your home theater and of your living room at the same time!

Always remember that the idea behind home theater is to set your system up so that you can enjoy movies to the fullest. Some people lose sight of this goal. Whatever you do with your home theater design, don’t fall into the trap of over-analyzing your results. Start enjoying those movies!

By: Dave Thomas

Space And Sound – Home Theater Decor

December 29th, 2009



All happy and satisfied with your new home theater “gear”? If it works out just perfect, meaning no strange buzzing noise occurs and the system you are so proud of looks lean and mean, then you still have something to work out by yourself: how to arrange a suitable décor so that the “wildest” sound combine with the visual placement of your new gadgets. If some vital steps aren’t taken into consideration, the aesthetics of your room will have to suffer a great deal. However, the functionality of the home theater is to be kept in regard at all times and it comes definitely first.

Unless you are in the possession of a quite modern and luxurious home that can allow an also modern way of setting up the home theater décor, that is- having the speakers built in the walls – you will have to do up the home theater décor like everyone else: the speakers are to be arranged so that they obviously surround your perimeter, and have the sound coming to where you pleasantly relax, from all central directions: front, back and around the television( the floor speakers usually accompany the TV at its sides). The home theater décor can be improved if shelves are provided, along with a proper piece of furniture, or electronic equipment, or if put on the top of the speakers some interesting ornaments, wherever your imagination leads you, the home theater décor will look good, and sound good.

How you take advantage of the space you have, is a question of creativity, and it is well known that home theaters are bought primarily to entertain you. Consequently, the television is to be located in the center of the room, on a wall, or in front of it, put on the ground. The small speakers of the home theater should go on the top of the TV-set and some speakers should be divided evenly, at the left and the right of the screen. Naturally, the rest of the speakers should encompass the room, hung up on walls, on shelves, and to the sides of the seating area, where a subwoofer will be put also. Why is that? So that you could feel the vibrations of it when you’re seated and when the intensity of the movie reaches a climax, in an action scene. How you place the speakers is vital to the crisp functionality of your home theater, using the rest of the location arrange a better décor.

We’ve dealt with space, now-Let There Not Be light! Indeed, to have an enviable home theater décor you have to maintain the room dark, and not have the space designed with things that are “dependent” of light such as plants, beautiful paintings that need to be otherwise admired, namely vivid colors. It is indicated that you use for the home theater décor stylish earthy hues, and have the number of those small ornaments kept as low as possible, because too many would diverge your attention and concentration from the movie. In addition to this, fray glass objects and -in general- breakable items are not recommended because the hopefully violent vibrations from the speakers might do just that. In order to add a sparkle of life to the room, you can use rugs and rustic carpets, and some images on the walls to some extent, so as not to clutter the room.

Finally, a little rehearsal: functionality is the most important feature of your home theater décor, and you should keep the home theater décor small and simple, having no fragile items in the same room you are going to entertain yourself. Also, try to design the space with the few methods mentioned above so as to give a splash of color to it, but you should bear in mind that simplicity and minimalism are the key to an ideal and very enjoyable home theater décor.

By: David Faulkner