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#1 |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 276
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I've begun construction of my Black Ice Theater, a DIY dedicated home theater. Since this is a first post I will attach the same scene that I've loaded on my projector.
![]() Of course, for eight months of the year it looks like this. ![]() More to come! Cheers, Kaoru |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 276
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First steps...
The first step in constructing my home theater is to thank everyone in DHC and AVS forums for all the invaluable information. Coming from a nothern mining town in Labrador, I learned early that you can do anything if you put your mind, creativity, and time into it. Having forums like DHC and AVS with all the contributions of many DIY'ers makes it all that easier to the point that I believe anyone, willing to commit themselves, can build a reasonable home theater. With that in mind, my goal is to document my home theater construction effort to contribute to DHC and AVS. To do this, I've setup on my home network a blog server, notably the Apache Incubator project Roller. I will use this weblogger as a journal to aggregate all the tibits of information that I've gathered to build out my home theater. Having my own server allows freedom in time, graphics, content, video/podcasting, etc. since I lead a very busy life (more on that later). Of course, this blog (though available via Sculpt Science) will be posted on DHC and AVS. Why do all of this? To make the best theater within the confines of my resources. Some of those resources include budget, knowledge, people, etc. Some resources I can't increase... (like my basement layout or ceiling height Reading between the lines... To allow you to read between the lines of this blog, the following is some background tidbits. Though Labrador is my hometown, since '91 I've lived in Ottawa, the national capital region. It is here where I call home with my wife and two daughters. My career is in computers (a bit of an understatement) and have worked for numerous companies though recently I've settled into a permanent position at the RCMP. With this in mind, I'm not an expert in construction, woodworking, acoustics, decorating, and anything else not related to computers/IT. I am an expert in several aspects (to numerous to mention) of computers/IT. However, I'm quite handy around tools and can woodwork, frame, drywall, tile, paint, do plumbing, cabling (besides network cabling <- expert), and carpeting. I'm creative, artistic, and knowledgeble (but my style is debatable as my wife says Up next is my HT design/plans... Cheers, Kaoru Ed Daigle About my handle: The name comes from an anime character that I liked (the anime being Ai Yori Yoshi). I also go by Kaoru-sama, the -sama is a politness level equivelent as Mr.; I'm certainly not a -sensei or -senpai. I like the idea of politeness levels the Japanese culture has; it's easy to show respect with simple words. Japanese Suffixes Howto for more... |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Windsor, Ontario
Posts: 58
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let's see the design/plans Ed,
nice to see Canadians passionate about the hobby, bring it on |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 276
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As promised, the following chronicles my home theater efforts in design and planning to date. Essentially, I've been putting together this design for quite awhile and obviously I've worked out something that can fit best with the resources on hand. What's on hand is an area in my basement put aside for said theater. It wasn't always that way but we do what we can... My house is a ~2200 sq. ft. bungalow so my basement is huge (and unfinished). Unfortunately, I have two structural I-beams with several doubled-up support poles dividing the area in thirds. With the basement stairs landing/entrance, a roughed-in bathroom, and prior framing (before HT bug got me) limits me to a single area and creative layout to maximize space. The other drawback is that my house sits on rock (they had to jackhammer/blast to put in my foundation) and thus my joist height is 7' 8"; so my HT willl be vertically challenged.
The area in mind is ~151" wide and 20'+ long but.... I have to have a hallway from the landing area past the future bathroom into the main area. There is no way around this and I don't want to have two doors for the theater with a throughfare... I want local traffic only! The trick to widening the theater by 16.5" is to incorporate the the I-beam into the soffit. The double pole gets incased in the column. With that said, you may have noticed the use of curves; that is the style of this home theater. Nice round flowing lines... like film and a film reel. Taking this, ceiling height, and budget (Sandman's ceiling is awsome but I can't) I decided on a large inset (faux) film reel with lighted edges/holes as a ceiling feature. I don't lose much height and fits in to the theme. ![]() The above is just a small image... click on it for a more clear image. Next up is a detailed explanation of what is going into that space and what equipment I have/leaning towards. Cheers, Kaoru |
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#5 |
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Veteran
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oakville, ON
Posts: 2,887
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Holy smokes, man... you've got my attention !
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simplicity is genius... |
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#6 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Calgary, Shaw Digital HD Plus, 3416 & Expander
Posts: 6,313
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Thats not a home theater son, thats a fricken' cinema!
__________________
SHAW 2012 HD Count: +8 (51 Total not counting SC or SNETWorld) |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Waterloo and Paris, Ontario
Posts: 108
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Speaker Locations? Don't see anything marked on the plan
Also...suggestion. The raised section att he back for the 2nd row. Fill that whole base with insulation. Those like to resonate at certain frequencies and really usually make certain bass notes unbearable. same with behind the screen itself. Put up loads of sound damping material behind there. Also....it looks like your projector is too close to the screen (if that is the black high end Hitachi unit that it looks like in the drawing) |
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#8 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 276
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Quote:
As for speaker locations, sub and centre behind screen, fronts will be Polk Audio in-wall speakers inset into the proscenium columns. Their about $350/pair at Future Shop. I will wire for 7.1 but initially put in 5.1. The surrounds will be Polk Audio in ceiling. Now that may seem a little strange but the Polk Audio speaks have a direction tweeter which I will aim at the columns (they will be made to reflect sound). The column (being round) will diffuse the sound so in theory it should be the same as the speaker being in the column. Why in the ceiling... well one of the columns has steel support poles in it. For the equipment rack, I would like to have a Middle Atlantic rack (there's a factory here in Ottawa/Stittsville but I don't have a contact... yet!) but that can be pricey. If not, custom wood shelves will suffice. I'm still debating whether or not to put a glass door on the front (for noise; more on that later). The equipment closet will have a ventilation fan (essentially a bathroom fan) linked to a temperature switch. I still don't know what I will do for the hush box in terms of ventilation but I think it will involve a temperature switch and inline duct fan (maybe to the closet?) . Any thoughts welcome... Equipment to date:
Cheers, Kaoru |
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#9 |
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Veteran
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oakville, ON
Posts: 2,887
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What is the rated power handling of those in-wall speakers ? That is a pretty big room.
Will your DIY screen be acoustically transparent for installing the centre speaker behind it as you have indicated ? You really might want to check/rethink that bit.
__________________
simplicity is genius... |
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#10 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Posts: 276
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Quote:
Fronts: Polk Audio In-Wall Speakers (RC65i) Crossover Point: 2500Hz Frequency Response: 32Hz - 20kHz Power Capability: 100 Watts Product Dimensions: 30.5(W) x 21.9(H) x 6.2(D) cm Sensitivity: 89 dB Tweeter Size: 1" Woofer Size: 6 1/2" Surrounds: Polk Audio In-Wall Speakers (RC60i) Crossover Point: 2500Hz Frequency Response: 40 Hz - 20 kHz Mid Range Speaker Size: 6 1/2" Power Capability: 100 Watts Sensitivity: 89 dB Tweeter Size: 1 x 1" As for the centre... it will be mounted either above or below the screen. Probably below since my HT is vertically challenged and it will be hard to keep the riser low but maintain view angles for a 110" screen. My understanding (which ain't much Cheers, Kaoru |
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#11 |
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Veteran
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oakville, ON
Posts: 2,887
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Centre speaker below would be much better than behind. Just make sure that you aim the drivers at your melon, not straight out.
Every room has it's own unique sonic characteristics. I would suggest that you have alternate subwoofer placement options. It is one of the hardest elements of speaker placement to sound natural. I've moved mine at least 5 times over the years. Get a long sub cable (15'), you might need it.
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simplicity is genius... |
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#12 | |
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Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Calgary, Shaw Digital HD Plus, 3416 & Expander
Posts: 6,313
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Quote:
__________________
SHAW 2012 HD Count: +8 (51 Total not counting SC or SNETWorld) |
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#13 | |
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Veteran
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oakville, ON
Posts: 2,887
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Quote:
Hold a canvas painting up to a light source.
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simplicity is genius... Last edited by filper; 2006-02-25 at 05:21 PM. |
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#14 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Calgary, Shaw Digital HD Plus, 3416 & Expander
Posts: 6,313
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Ah, sorry....didn't see the DIY part.
__________________
SHAW 2012 HD Count: +8 (51 Total not counting SC or SNETWorld) |
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#15 |
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Windsor, Ontario
Posts: 58
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i would actually prefer to mount the center speaker above the screen rather than below. Angle the speaker to the listening position and i have found after years of having a center below the screen on a speaker stand that above sounds better. Better to try both than decide what your preferences are.
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