Audio Artistry CBT36K kit

B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
False wall behind the screen, and get an accoustically transparent screen. Now where would one get one of these screens at.
 
GranteedEV

GranteedEV

Audioholic Ninja
False wall behind the screen, and get an accoustically transparent screen. Now where would one get one of these screens at.
Seymour AV sells both complete AT screens, and DIY AT screen material. I think they are white screens. In brighter rooms a gray screen can give blacker blacks, but if you can control the ambient light in the room then white is the way to go. Don't ask me though. Somebody else at the Projectors / screens etc boards can probably give you more accurate info.
 
Last edited:
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
There will be no non-artificial lighting in the room. I have already taken out all windows in the room. So a white screen will be ok with me.
 
GO-NAD!

GO-NAD!

Audioholic Spartan
There will be no non-artificial lighting in the room. I have already taken out all windows in the room. So a white screen will be ok with me.
There's more to it than that though. For best front projector performance, light reflection needs to be kept as low as possible. Light from the projector will be reflected from the screen to the walls, floor and ceiling. The brighter those reflections are, the lower your contrast and the more washed out the colours will be.

Painting everything flat black would be best, but of course, few people want a room like that - including me. So, you need to choose your colours wisely and go with the darkest and flattest you can live with.

Then, there's lighting. Try to set up dimmable light "zones" on separate circuits. Sometimes you might need a bit of light in the room while the projector is in use. If you have a zone at the back of the room, you could have those lights on, while those near the screen remain off.

I have a DIY screen that I bought from Seymour and I'm very happy with the quality of the screen material. I built the wood frame myself, which was pretty simple to do. You can save a LOT of money by building a screen yourself. Or, if you aren't keen on doing that, asking a friend do it would be a pretty small imposition.

Having said all that, I would be loath to hide those CBT36's behind an AT screen and false wall. I think they look tres cool and I'd want them seen. But, if performance is your highest priority and you don't care if they are seen, than 3 of those across the front behind an AT screen and false wall would sound awesome, I'm sure.

If you do go that route, do your research - rework is a b*tch.:eek: The "Projectors & Screens" forum has lots of info. BMXTRIX is the guy who can probably provide the most/best advice. Jostenmeat is also very helpful, although I haven't seen him posting lately.
 
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
There's more to it than that though. For best front projector performance, light reflection needs to be kept as low as possible. Light from the projector will be reflected from the screen to the walls, floor and ceiling. The brighter those reflections are, the lower your contrast and the more washed out the colours will be.

There will be very minimal reflection. Carpet in the room and a flat paint. Ceiling we havent decided on.

Painting everything flat black would be best, but of course, few people want a room like that - including me. So, you need to choose your colours wisely and go with the darkest and flattest you can live with.
Havent chosen a color yet, but it will not be black. A darker color though.

Then, there's lighting. Try to set up dimmable light "zones" on separate circuits. Sometimes you might need a bit of light in the room while the projector is in use. If you have a zone at the back of the room, you could have those lights on, while those near the screen remain off.
I am sure we will have two different dimmer units for lights. Still in production stage though.

I have a DIY screen that I bought from Seymour and I'm very happy with the quality of the screen material. I built the wood frame myself, which was pretty simple to do. You can save a LOT of money by building a screen yourself. Or, if you aren't keen on doing that, asking a friend do it would be a pretty small imposition.
I looked at the DIY and as always nervous about it but not sure yet.

Having said all that, I would be loath to hide those CBT36's behind an AT screen and false wall. I think they look tres cool and I'd want them seen. But, if performance is your highest priority and you don't care if they are seen, than 3 of those across the front behind an AT screen and false wall would sound awesome, I'm sure.

I will be honest, I am not keen on hiding those speakers. I really want to see them. I think they will bring more to the room, but again still havent totally decided.

If you do go that route, do your research - rework is a b*tch.:eek: The "Projectors & Screens" forum has lots of info. BMXTRIX is the guy who can probably provide the most/best advice. Jostenmeat is also very helpful, although I haven't seen him posting lately.
I have seen some of BMXTRIX's post and he recommends the Carada Criterion Series a lot. I have been looking at those alot and they have some great reviews.

Thanks for all the info, I am soaking it all in.
 
GO-NAD!

GO-NAD!

Audioholic Spartan
I looked at the DIY and as always nervous about it but not sure yet.
Seymour has a guide for building your own frame on their website - it's pretty simple.:)

http://www.seymourav.com/articles/DIYFixedFrame.pdf

I will be honest, I am not keen on hiding those speakers. I really want to see them. I think they will bring more to the room, but again still havent totally decided.
It certainly is a conundrum.:( How wide is the room? I don't know if you could use an AT screen with just a partial false wall (above and below the screen, but not out to the sides). Food for thought...

I have seen some of BMXTRIX's post and he recommends the Carada Criterion Series a lot. I have been looking at those alot and they have some great reviews.
I don't know anything about that screen, but I certainly wouldn't argue with him.:D This is what I used:

Seymour AV | Center Stage screens

Thanks for all the info, I am soaking it all in.
You're welcome.:)
 
GranteedEV

GranteedEV

Audioholic Ninja
I would only put the Center behind the AT screen, woth the LR to its sides and a few feet into the room ;D
 
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
I would only put the Center behind the AT screen, woth the LR to its sides and a few feet into the room ;D
What I was thinking as well. Still want to see that new center of theirs though. I wonder if he will let me order just one of the CBT's by itself if I get impatient.
 
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
Ok, just found out the builder is going to allow me to do all my HT wiring for speakers, HDMI, etc.

Anyone want to give me some ideas on what I will need, maybe a central location to get all of it. I see people recommending bluejeanscable a lot. Going there now to check some stuff out. What size wiring and stuff like that.

I will probably go ahead and put the wallplates in for the surrounds as well while I am at it. I am going to start drawing up the blueprints in the next few days.
 
GranteedEV

GranteedEV

Audioholic Ninja
Not that it reallly matters but... dual 14 awg. Dual just in case you ever want to switch to bi-amped surrounds in the future, and 14awg because it's easier to work with than 12 awg. You can always use them simultaneously as a larger gauge (effectively ~11 awg).

XLR cables are nice too especially because of they way they click. If using RCA cables make sure they have half-decent shielding.
 
annunaki

annunaki

Moderator
Lots of runs of Cat-5e or Cat-6 from your tv/projector locations to you main equipment areas. You can run nearly any signal over Cat-5e/Cat-6 these days and the more runs you have the better, especially when thinking toward the future.

I like the recommendation of dual 14 ga runs as well.

Plan for how things will be when finished an work your way backward from there to best prepare from a wiring standpoint. Remember that extra wire runs are cheap now compared to a costly retro wiring job in the future.

I also recommend dedicated circuits for your HT lighting and dedicated circuits for your gear. 20A circuits (2) for your gear are usually my recommendation.
 
GO-NAD!

GO-NAD!

Audioholic Spartan
And, after you run the cabling, check it all for continuity! Might not be that important for heavy gauge speaker wire, but Cat-5E/6 is more fragile. I had a run that was DOA - which I discovered after the wallboard was put up.:eek: I was able to hide another run, but it was a PITA.

The room is 15'8" wide
Well, depending on the size of your screen, that should give you room to place the L/R outboard of the screen, leaving them fully visible.:)

I would only put the Center behind the AT screen, woth the LR to its sides and a few feet into the room ;D
What I was thinking as well. Still want to see that new center of theirs though. I wonder if he will let me order just one of the CBT's by itself if I get impatient.
If you go that route, I would definitely build a partial false wall, the same width as the screen, to fill in above and below and support the screen. The bottom of a speaker visible below the screen would look odd to me. Unless, of course, you go with a powered screen that is only lowered when watching something. A fixed screen would be quite a bit less expensive though.
 
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
I like the look of the false wall, but done like the wasted space. I like a more open look but well see how it looks when I get in there. I am going to ask the builder to not finish the room and just let me do it all. That is if he is willing to take an X amount off the total price.
 
GO-NAD!

GO-NAD!

Audioholic Spartan
I like the look of the false wall, but done like the wasted space. I like a more open look but well see how it looks when I get in there. I am going to ask the builder to not finish the room and just let me do it all. That is if he is willing to take an X amount off the total price.
Well, you need to pull your speakers away from the front wall anyway, right? An AT screen plunked in front of the centre speaker need only take a couple more inches of floor space - 5" or 6" at the very most. The space on either side of the screen doesn't need to be filled in by the false wall at all. So personally, I wouldn't be too concerned about wasting space.
 
agarwalro

agarwalro

Audioholic Ninja
Putting a partial false wall blocks out the lower portion of the array and critically, the ground reflection. It therefore destroys the speaker's theoretical benefits and completely changes the FR since the equalization is no longer appropriate.

Black AT grill cloth is the way to go.

If you want to go radical, you could hang the center speaker from the ceiling. Someone somewhere is doing a modified version of the CBT arrary for surrounds in such a manner.
 
B

benbodtke

Junior Audioholic
Still waiting to hear back from the builder on leaving that room unfinished. If that will be ok, then I will just start building a soundstage for the theater. Still not sure what to do about the center but a ton of ideas floating around. I might even try and build it into the soundstage somehow.
 
GranteedEV

GranteedEV

Audioholic Ninja
That's why I suggested in the sentence before:
As has been mentioned by agarwalro (hey man that sounds like a last name, would you prefer to be called by your first? ) you'd be blocking off half the speaker. This speaker is meant to be standing (or hanging) above (or below) the floor (or ceiling) in order to act as a line source. If you block off half the speaker's output with drywall, then you're effectively messing with the design.

Line sources are best when vertical, as they minimize offensive vertical reflections while maximizing desirable horizontal reflections. That is why we want it be behind an AT screen, as flipping it on its side would probably have ill effects on the perceived multichannel soundstage (though probably not the timbre, luckily).

BTW, Ben, I would try to avoid having any 90 degree corners if you do end up with a falsewall. Try to have large format 45 degree bevels where possible.

Don't discount the possibility that maybe you don't even need a center. Perhaps stereo is perfect for your needs. Build the speakers first and then decide on the rest. I know I don't particularily care for center speakers, at least until I can do the whole AT screen thing myself.
 

Latest posts

newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top