Home Entertainment & Automation Services in Matthews, NC.
Home Entertainment & Automation Services in Matthews, NC.
Home audio and Video Services in Matthews, NC.  TV installation, Surround Sound, Home Entertainment Systems
What Display is Best for My Viewing Distance?

CIS - Charlotte, NC's Source for speakercraft and Marantz home theater speakers and electronics!

CIS - Charlotte, NC's Source for speakercraft and Marantz home theater speakers and electronics!

Is a plasma a good idea for Steve’s 15-20 foot viewing distance?

Q. I am looking at purchasing a Samsung PN63B590 for my living room. I’m going plasma because of the size, and my viewing distance is 15-20 feet. Is there a better option that you know of for the same price range? – Steve, Indiana

A. Steve, my suggestion, considering your viewing distance, is to go with a two-piece projection system.

I searched around and found an Epson Home Cinema 8100 1080p Projector for $1,500. I also found an Elite Screen 100-inch EZ Frame CineGrey Screen for $385. This system gives you a much bigger screen for less than $2,000.

The 100-inch CineGrey from Elite helps color saturation, black levels and contrast in rooms with ambient light. The Epson projector is a highly-rated, affordable 1080p projector that should be bright enough to fill a 100-inch screen with some ambient light.

A plasma will do certain things better than a two-piece system. But with the combination of Epson’s 1080p resolution and the gray screen, you should get a good picture from it and an even better picture when the lights are off.

One thing both plasmas and projection systems need is control of a room’s ambient light. LCD TVs are brighter and custom installers tend to use them more in a bright room. Where you’re looking at a plasma, you’ll need some control of the light.

If you buy this system, look into Lutron’s Maestro IR dimmer. It’s $40 at Home Depot, installs in a few minutes, and controls your lights, saving you just as much money as a CFL bulb.

If this system is too complex, talk to a local custom installer. He may have some basic packages that he could install for you.

 by Robert Archer

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/what_display_is_best_for_my_viewing_distance/C223

Custom Installation Services, LLC – Audio/Video Sales, Service and Installation in North Carolina and South Carolina

 

Posted in Home Theater, lighting control, Media Rooms, technology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment


7 Cool Lighting Control Ideas

Examples of how cookie-cutter lighting control solutions can’t cut it.

The lighting requirements of every homeowner are unique.

Cookie-cutter lighting control solutions just don’t cut it anymore.

We collected some of our favorite lighting control installs, including a Super Bowl MVP, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and quirky product inventor.

So whether you’re adding lighting control yourself or with the help of a CE pro, here are a few ideas to get your brain pumping.

scenes_setting_controlScenes Setting Control
A little lighting control goes a long way toward simplifying life in this 17,000-square foot home. The hallway lighting brightens gradually to preset intensity levels at the touch of a button tied into the Crestron automation system.

An “Entertain” scene adjusts the brightness levels of select lights to accentuate the home’s unique architectural features, while also opening the motorized draperies to provide a view of the mountains from the floor-to-ceiling windows. A “Good Morning” scene switches on fixtures in certain rooms.

A “Goodbye” scene sweeps through the house to ensure that every light is turned off during the owners’ absence. “Goodnight With Guests” switches off every light except for the fixtures in the guest suites and hallways.

controlling_an_islandControlling an Island
Segway inventor Dean Kamen owns a lighthouse home on the North Dumplings Island. A couple of years ago, the U.S. government cut the undersea cable that powered the lighthouse, forcing Kamen to rely on solar panels to power his home.

Philips Color Kinetics, makers of LED, helped Kamen with his goal “to design and build the world’s neatest home lighting system.” An LED Light System Manager from Philips now controls the island’s color LEDs and can modulate each bulb to control brightness, generate different colors from the red, green and blue LEDs.

bright_lights_of_hollywoodBright Lights of Hollywood
It took more than just pretty lighting effects for this Hollywood Hills home to win Electronic House’s Home of the Year. A Vantage lighting system, controlled by Crestron automation, includes various scenes that light up or accent specific areas of this 7,000-square-foot residence. It provides both practical and architectural enhancements.

controlling_ledControlling LED
This was an enormous LED retrofit – to the tune of about $60,000 worth of energy-saving improvements.

“Everything about the project was big,” says Mark McGuinness of Chesley Electric in Park City, Utah, of this 16,500-square-foot home that recently won Lutron’s Excellence Award for Best Green Project.

A big portion of the savings came from Chesley replacing all the system’s halogen lighting, inside and out, with LEDs from LED Power. Adding LED bulbs in a dimmable lighting control system is not an easy trick.

The Lutron HomeWorks system is able to dim the 300 or so MR16 lights, but not the recessed PAR lamps. So Chesley programmed the lighting control system to shut off the PAR lamps during certain dimmable scenes. For example, in the kitchen, when a SOFT scene button is pressed, the MR16s over the cabinets dim, and the six receding PAR lamps shut off.

light_my_wayLight My Way
It’s not always easy to navigate a 12,000-square-foot home, so Shelton, Conn.-based Advanced Home Audio provides some trails.

A connection between a Vantage lighting control system and AMX home control system allows the family to brighten, dim and turn on and off more than 200 interior and exterior lights.

Pathways, which illuminate a route between rooms, can also be engaged from a touchpanel. The system maps out a course to the destination automatically, based on where the user is. For example, if the user activates the “Movie” path from the kitchen touchpanel, lights leading from the kitchen to the home theater switch on.

no_lighting_control_bluesNo Lighting Control Blues
When you’re an 84-year-old blues legend who still loves performing enough to tour the country, you deserve nice accommodations.

So it’s good that B.B. King’s $1.4 million, 45-foot luxury motor coach with more than $200,000 worth of electronics includes some solid lighting control. It uses a proprietary 12-relay lighting control system that was designed by Digital Home Lifestyles, which controls the 64 zones of lighting.

quarterback_approved_controQuarterback-Approved Control
Total home control was Eli Manning ‘s overwhelming priority when the Mannings gutted and renovated their 3,000-square-foot condo. Eli and his wife wanted one-touch control of audio, video, motorized shades and lights. The couple worked with Audio Video Crafts, using both Lutron and Crestron components to design the system.

 

 

by Tom LeBlanc

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/7_cool_lighting_control_ideas/

Custom Installation Services, LLC – Home Theater, Audio and Video Services, Home Automation  in North Carolina and South Carolina

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10 Tips to Make a Family Room Look Like a Theater

famtheater300Tricks that’ll make your family room have that home theater vibe.

Not everyone has the luxury of dedicating a room solely for big-screen movie viewing. More often, that space is shared with a family room, a den or a guest bedroom.

And that’s OK. Your family room is already finished and furnished. Plus, it probably already has a good-size TV and modest surround-sound system.

If your family room is like most, it may not look or feel much like a theater. What it’s likely lacking is ambiance – something in the arrangement and design of the room that gives off a theater vibe.

You can go as simple or as complicated as you want to produce the desired cinematic effect. Here are 10 ideas to consider.

1. Re-paint: Dark, rich colors like burgundy and navy blue scream theater. Plus, because light doesn’t reflect off dark colors like it does off light colors, the video on your TV will look better.

2. Rearrange the Furniture: The screen at your local cinema sits directly in front of the seats; your TV should, too, which may require a slight adjustment of your family room furniture.

3. Add Architectural Details: Decorative moldings, pillars and other theater-inspired details are widely available at home improvement stores.

4. Incorporate New Lighting: Most of the pre-show lighting in a commercial theater is produced by sconces on the wall. Put a few on the walls of your family room for additional lighting that looks like the real thing. Rope lighting is also very theater-esque.

5. Install Dimmers: If you don’t want to run new electrical wiring for the sconces, at least swap your existing light switch for a dimmer. You’ll be able to fade out the lights before the movie starts.

6. Hang Drapes: Nice, thick drapes like the ones that cover the screen at the movie theater evoke the look and feel you’re after. As a bonus, they can block out incoming light and improve room acoustics.

7. Hide the Components: Remove all the audio and video components from the room and place them somewhere else in the house, like a closet or utility room. Trade in your existing infrared remote control for a radio frequency-based remote. It’ll be able to transmit commands to the equipment through walls, floors and doors. 

8. Build a Riser: You can enjoy the same stadium-style seating of your neighborhood cinema in your own family room by having a riser built. Marc Huebner of Enhanced Home Systems in Eden Prairie, Minn., recommends constructing two steps that are each six inches high. The top step should include a platform at least six feet deep so that chairs can fit comfortably on it.

9. Pick New Seats: Invest in theater-style seating, especially if you’ve built risers. These seats can be ordered in a color to complement the new wall paint. They can include features like reclining action and built-in cup holders.

10. Attach Fabric Wall Panels: The walls in most theaters are covered in fabric. You can do the same in your family room, although you don’t have to do the entire space.
by Lisa Montgomery

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/10_tips_to_make_a_family_room_look_like_a_theater/

Custom Installation Services, LLC – Home Theater, Audio and Video Services, Home Automation  in North Carolina and South Carolina

Posted in Flat Panel TV's, Home Theater, lighting control | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment


Custom Installation Services, LLC | P.O. Box 132 Matthews, NC 28106 | 704-400-8701 | dmiller@cis-nc.com
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