I've done plenty of family room surround setups before, but this time I am doing a fully dedicated projection theater room install on a limited budget. I will NOT do a HTIB...yuck.
On site I have a 120" Da-Lite screen and am looking at various projectors in the sub $1,000 range, the most promising of which appears to be the Mitsubishi HD1000U DLP Projector @ 1500 ANSI Lumens, Native Resolution: 1280 x 720, Contrast Ratio: 2500 : 1 - for about $875 street currently.
I'd like to install a 7.1 audio surround setup. I've been looking at Onkyo TX-SR505, 604 (and 605s which are brand new not in stock most places) as well as some other brands. One question I have come upon - do I really NEED HDMI I/O on the audio side? (Or video side for that matter!)
This room will be for DVD movies playing only so I don't care about XM or music or TV or cable.
So now I have lots of audio connections down in front by the screen to make - L, C, R, sub, plus LS & RS prewired in wall - plus if I go 7.1 I will be adding L/R side fills - 16 wires in total....so my amplifier obviously must be down in front but at least 30' away (wired) from the projector in the ceiling.
Now add the DVD player - one I currently have (Sony"s DVP-NS775V) has 5.1 audio outs and component video out. I imagine using something like that would be setup by the audio system - so only 3 cables have to go the distance to the projector. What if I got a DVD that had HDMI out though? Mount it with the projector then run a snake for the audio??????
Just having a bit of conflict over the best setup in this type of situation cabling wise, and looking for recommendations on DVD players w/good surround audio/7.1 surround amps - and to HDMI or not to HDMI? Is it better to push HDMI out into the receiver then let it do the surround decoding? Mostly from what i can tell all HDMI does in consolidate the 5.1 audio and composite video into one cable - really nothing special. Where do the extra two channels in 7.1 then come from - just a DSP in the amp?
BTW - I worked for 30+ years in pro audio, so I know some things...the HT setup is a little different than recording studios though!