Sorry for making you read something long:
Mrhappysuncle said:
I plan on getting one row of three theater seats and putting them right in the middle. I could use the opposing wall if I made some adjustment to the bar that will be toward the back left corner. There is space for in wall speakers on the sides between the windows but I may re-think that and look at on-wall more closely in my research. I also currently have an LG upconverting DVD player and a Poineer USX 1015-TX (how do these compare to the Yamaha RX's?) that I can rob from another room. Thanks guys.
I'm sorry, but I'm guessing on your room drawing. The door and screen is shown on the 13' wall? If this is true, it's actually pretty good for you because with the 27" to play with you can add another row of seating and have room for a small bar area in the back. My room is 12' x 20' x 10' tray ceiling (
http://forums.audioholics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=22943)
With the additional room in the back you could place a small bar with bar stools for people to sit at. You could even buy just a love seat for the back row to give enough room for small end tables (snacks, drinks). Place the back area on an approx 6" to 8" deck to raise them over the front row.
Yes, by all means, if you have an upconverting DVD player and a receiver to use for now, use them! More than likely you'll be able to buy a receiver. I would stick with a 720P native projector for now and a decent fixed wall screen in the 100" to 110" range. This will still leave you with plenty of room on either side for speakers and work well with the approx 20' seated distance. If you look at bookshelve speakers for now the mounting locations will be almost the same for in-wall speakers. If you leave a couple of extra feet of wire in the wall you will have plenty of extra if you decide to later change to in-walls. (NOTE: if you haven't put the drywall up yet, at the very least put some fiberglass batting in the walls).
As far as subwoofer. It's a MUST HAVE, but if the budget is set it might be tough right now. A good quality sub will run between $500 and $1,000. A big hit on a tight budget. Right now the important stuff is behind the walls. Run all the cables, install a 2" conduit from the receiver area to the projector location and run electric to these locations.
STEP #1: Go to
www.projectorcentral.com (and Audioholics) and start reading about projector and screens. Once you pick out what projector and screen you want, then you can learn the proper mounting distance from the screen to the projector. They are the first big expenditures.
STEP#2: Audition some speakers. Read reviews. Listen to in-walls vs. conventional speakers. Choose what sounds best
TO YOU. My advice would be to spend at least 25% to 30% of you budget on speakers.
STEP#3: Buy the cables, wall plates and in-wall wires to hook everything up. Don't need to spend huge amounts of money on the big name companies. Just make sure you install UL CL2 or CL3 rated wires in the walls and ceiling (that damn electrical code thing).
STEP #4: If you have any money left
look at a decent receiver. This will put you back between $800 to $1,000.
STEP #5: Beg the wife for another $800 to get a good subwoofer
JUST REMEMBER BUDGETS ARE MEANT TO BE BROKEN (Yes, I work for the government)