Thanks for the snideness, it's really helpful.
Depending on who you listen to there are far differeing opinions on the matter.
A gentleman was showing me pictures of Da-Lite comparisons with graphs and there are a few shades of "paint" that 'outperformed' the Da-Lite.
Also, showed the three links and the first two were shot down extremely quickly.
So, I'm not saying you guys are right or he is, but just getting conflicting information and reccomendations.
So I'm trying to weed through the heap and figure out what is best as I'm learning along the way.
Snide? You don't know snide.
My post as the others
were helpful. I wrote
try a FEW types of paint to see if there is any appreciable benefit. I wanted to bring to your attention to the fact that there are
literally millions of permutations of sheen and color. One screen is not perfect for every application, neither will one color befit all applications. That is why I wrote "try a few." If you are so easily offended, grow a thicker skin. You misread what I wrote, and then insult me as I'm trying to help...I remain undaunted.
There are many variables with projectors and screens. You have failed to mentioned:
1) the amount of ambient light in the room (except in your last post...and then you write "a little");
2) the color of your walls, ceilings and floor;
3) the distance from lens to screen; and
4) the height of the lens and screen.
You have purchase avia...good.
As far as conflicting info...most
novices will never properly install a projector, let alone calibrate it. This is not simply plugging in some patch cords and turning on a knob. If you spend a few dozen hours reading and researching, and then a few more hours tinkering...you may be able to obtain some pretty good results. However, I still believe you would be better off with a halfway decent screen (you have a 1k projector...why not spend a little to receive that image?) that is appropriate for your particular setting and then doing a proper setup and calibration. Cheers.