Home Theater Room Designs Make or Break Your Listening Pleasure




Home theater room designs

These make all the difference between great listening and viewing and merely adequate or even irritating listening and viewing. If you halt this video at one of the layout diagrams you can copy the ideal layout for 5.1 or 7.1 systems.

The trouble is that most of us can’t start our design before our house is built. One Australian had a custom-made 16-foot sub-woofer placed under the floor before he had the floor built.

If you start off with a room that is almost square, you can forget using 7.1 surround sound. That is no great loss, because in 2011 there are still few recordings designed for 7.1 surround sound, which requires a long narrow room.


Even worse is one of the modern open-plan buildings so loved by builders who want to save money on load-bearing walls. My house has the living-room, dining-room, study, and kitchen built all in one with waist-high dividers, and includes sloping walls that will echo the sound in all the wrong directions.

If you are unlucky enough to have such a room, you can forget sound bars home theater room designs. Sound bars rely entirely on reflections from the walls, ceilings, and floors, and only work well if you have a box-shaped room.

OK. Let’s assume that you have a box-shaped room. Is that all that’s needed for home theater room designs? Unfortunately not. If your floor space is roughly square you might be better to choose a home stereo receiver for your home cinema, and certainly nothing bigger than a 5.1 surround sound home theater audio system.

If you have a long room, it might be too long for speaker wiring, and you’ll want wireless speakers for the back of the room, and you’ll want electrician-installed power points for the radio receivers associated with the wireless speakers.

So much for the theory of the ideal listening room, which is box-shaped without windows in the viewing wall, without curtains or carpet, and limited home theater chairs. The more upholstered home theater seats you have, and the more curtains and carpets you have when you design home theater room, the more subdued will be the sound in your home theater room designs.

Now for your home theater screens. I told you that your home theater setup should have no windows in the viewing wall. Well, mine has four, and the space between only allows me a 32 inch flat-screen TV. I can only pretend that I didn’t want a sixty inch screen anyway!

Your home theater room designs should check first that there are no windows or lights that will reflect from the screen. Put a large mirror where you want the screen to go, sit where you want to watch, and take note if you can see a window or a reading lamp. I can see the neighbor’s sun-lit roof tiles reflected in my TV if I don’t close the blinds.

Finally, your home theater room designs should make sure there is somewhere for all your cabling to go, and all your speakers, and all your receivers, and all your players, and all your listeners/viewers. So don’t you think it might be an idea to choose your
Quality Home Theater Systems before you do the final design?



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