Different approach
I am setting up audio in a room that is 15’ wide by 30 long’.
I have a flat screen TV along the 15’ wall
And a projector at the end of the room 90 degrees to the wall where the TV is..
(Example: Sit in a chair facing TV to watch TV, to watch projector screen, pick up chair and turn 90 degrees to face projector screen)
The projector screen has left/Right/Center speakers to the (Of course) Left Right and center of the screen. That works fine.
The surround speakers are on stands and can “float”, another words I can move them where I want them.
The problem is: When I watch TV, and I want audio processed by my receiver, the Left Right and center speakers are at the other end of the room.
What I want to do is: have two sets of Left/Right/center speakers, 1 set for watching projected movies placed around the projector screen, and a second set of Left/Right/Center placed around the TV screen, again the surround speakers are mobile and can be moved to accommodate seating arrangement.
I have been looking for a simple (No Volume control) A/B switch for these two sets of Left/Right/Center speakers but have been unable to find what I am looking for.
I have looked at A/B switches for speakers, but they seem to only work for Pairs (2 speakers in a remote room)
Are you aware of anything that you could point me to to solve my problem?, and anything I may need to be aware of when doing so.
All audio is processed through receiver (Blue ray player, Netflix etc.)
I will never have both sets of Left/Right/Center playing at the same time….
Any help would be greatly appreciated!!?
Thanks,
Daniel
Daniel,
Welcome to the forum.
I would suggest the following solution sets:
1) For the projector use your receiver to build a 5.1 system with the receiver's room EQ applied for the listening space and speaker positions.
2) For the TV get an inexpensive (or not) 2-channel AVR with sub out and a pair of speakers and sub (optional) to set up an independant 2.1 system in support of TV viewing.
- If commited to 3.1 for the TV, then buy a 5.1 AVR to enable this feature (not needed IMHO).
- Add a 2nd Bluray player (cheap these days) if needed for disks and/or Netflix; also consider adding an
inexpensive bluetooth receiver (~$30) if you want to stream audio from iPad or other phone/tablet.
Advantages:
a) Control of systems rests in remote(s), vice switches.
b) Adds ability to have simultaneous viewing (multiple sport games?), even if you do not use both audio at same time.
c) Avoids the "mistake" of using the surrounds in two different systems/positions where it is not possible to dial them in properly (i.e. speaker distance, EQ curve, etc.)
d) Avoids the problematic nature of different main speakers (L/C/R) using the same speaker distance and EQ settings.
Disadvantages:
Increased cost of 2nd AVR and BR player.
3) For the chairs replace with
swivel chairs - no need to throw a back out moving them back and forth
Cheers,
XEagleDriver