Quote:
yourgrandma wrote:
The dual center setup is retty nice,especially when its impossible to have all the speakers in the frons on the same horizantal plane. It also takes some stress off the center, as mine may be a bit undersized.
Something I learned through setting up our other projector is that I much prefer having the screen as low as possible. It seems to mesh the audio with the picture best, and i really dont like having to look up to see the action.
I think the smartest thing to do would be to wait till i get the PJ and set it up on a latter ay different distances to see what size I;m going to need, I can use the exsiting BOM screen for testing, because I cant see going bigger than 96".
Are your figures for offset with the PJ level of with an angle to it? I dont mind a little bit of keystone correction, just not too much. Can I mount the HD-70 upside down? |
I agree, there is no substitute for getting the pj in hand, and then shooting the image. For ceiling mount installations, yes...the pj is typically mounted upside down. I would think that with a ceiling mount there is no reason that you'd need any keystone correction.
As I mentioned, with a flush ceiling mount, the bottom of your screen in the scenario I gave would be 36" from the floor. With an 18" extension ceiling mount, you're at 18" from the floor. I can't imagine going any lower than that...and that range gives you NO keystone correction at all.