Here are some more pics, hosted on my server:
Here's the new center channel speaker, all 140lbs of it:
Here's the center speaker, installed, screen removed for maintenance:
Screen wall as of Aug 7:
Folks from all over come to visit my studio and hear this sound system. They come from as far as Okayama, Japan and as close as my home town. The editor from Stereophile was here last year. I'd like to have Peter Aczel of
The Audio Critic visit, but he's all the way over in Quakertown, PA. Rhode Island is probably a 5-hour drive, since I'm on the northwest part of the state (Litchfield county).
The listening experience has changed radically with the addition of video in recent years. But now with the projector, it takes center stage, given that the sound equipment is effectively concealed from view. We no longer just sit and listen to CDs now. We watch movies and I love to show off the super resolution I shoot with the CineAlta cameras. One of my fun little demos is showing how much more detailed digital cinema is compared with film transferred to Blu-ray. The differences are dramatic on a screen this size. 90%of Blu-ray movies don't contain detail down to the single pixel level. So when I show footage that DOES have full on/off detail on the boundary of a single pixel, it looks sharp and clear as 20/20 vision, even on a screen this size.
My friend, Bill, estimated out that he would have to sit 8" from his monitor to get the same subtending of his view that he got sitting in the seating 8' from the screen here.
Next month, the digitally-restored and remastered Wizard of Oz is coming out on Blu-ray and my friend, Bill, is going to bring it over for viewing. Movie fans will recall it was shot with the Technicolor Three-Strip Camera, and the remastering involves scanning each frame to a 54MB uncompressed still, and digitally cleaning it up, reassembling the red, green and blue film frames from the three color strips of film and remastering into one humungous digital file. That Blu-ray disc ought to look amazing. I do wonder what they'll do to make the 1939-vintage audio sound better. Should be interesting.
The red velvet looks great. It's really dark because of the way it reflects light anisotropically, so it just blends into blackness when the lights are dimmed.
I rolled out a 5' x 12' carpet in front of the screen wall this evening. It is a remnant left over from the w-w livingroom carpeting installation that I saved for 32 years. Now it have found an ideal use as a light absorber and acoustic absorber. The sound is so dead in front of the screen it feels as though one has gone deaf. There aren't any early reflections anymore. This should make a nice difference in soundstage imaging.
So, a vision I have had for three decades finally comes to fruition.