7/26/2011

Build Your Home Theater - Blueprints

Home Theater Receiver



In my opinion, the most leading thing that you need to do before the building phase of your home theater is to draw out your idea. Just as a laborer needs a blueprint to develop a building, you also need some sort of drawing to effect when you as a matter of fact get to the building phase of your home theater. You need to do this for a number of very good reasons:



Home Theater Receiver

If you have people helping you during construction, it will give them a great understanding of what you're trying to do. It will be easier for you to make a shopping list of building materials you need. You can experiment with different ideas about seating arrangements, speaker placement and location of equipment before you start physically thoughprovoking things around. It will stop you from permanently changing your mind during building because you didn't have a plan. Most importantly... Once it is on paper, you won't forget the "look and feel" ideas you initially had. building can take months to unblemished and you're going to forget all those great ideas.

Now don't get me wrong, you don't need to get out a drafting table and that funky blue paper, but I do know some people who purchased architect software to develop their home theater blueprints. All you as a matter of fact need is a piece of paper or notebook to keep track of all your drawings and ideas.

Start by drawing the basic shape of your room and scribble in all the things that are already there. I love dealing with a room that is thoroughly empty because all I have to pay attentiveness to are the electrical outlets, lighting fixtures, and any objects that cannot be moved.

The Tv, receivers, speakers, subwoofers and amplifiers are all added next... You don't need to draw it perfectly to scale, but at this point you'll get a great idea of where everything will be in relation to the entry and your proposed seating arrangement. Try to be realistic here and keep things in perspective; don't draw your speakers larger than your Tv if they aren't.

One of the most leading things you must detail in your blueprint is the location of your electronics and all the wiring (speaker/electrical/cable/satellite) that will be needed to associate everything together. If you decide to put your equipment in the back of the theater, you Must detail how the wiring will travel straight through the walls to your speakers and to the Tv in the front of the room. This will save you headaches when you start running wire.

Once you have everything drawn in, you should quit your blueprint by asking yourself the following questions:

Do I need to remove, move, or add any electrical outlets? Is the existing lighting conducive to a theater design? Do I need to add any lighting or put lighting on cut off switches? Are the seats arranged so I can walk safely around them when the lights are off? Do I need to develop more than 1 row of seating? Are my electronics in a location where I can as a matter of fact passage them during a movie in the dark? Do I need sound insulation in the walls/ceiling?

Remember that you are going to run into a lot of thoughprovoking problems during the building phase, and no blueprint will ever foresee all those situations. Don't fool yourself into reasoning that you've notion of everything, but be rest assured that while you were drawing your blueprint, you notion of things that could have gone wrong and worked around them already.

Build Your Home Theater - Blueprints
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