Television: JVC HD-61FH97 HD-ILA 61" HDTV (No longer available)
Back
in 2006 we went on 'Projector Quest' to find the right projector for
Braden's house. The room could support a 100" screen, so why not,
right? As time went on he realized that there was just too much
ambient light to make it a viable option, so he dropped back to rear
projection. Sure 61" is big, but now that everyone (meaning the
finance committee), has had a chance to adjust to the larger screen, it
looks like it could go a bit bigger. Next home theater upgrade: 70" or
bigger.
Receiver: Denon AVR 3806 7.1 channel AV receiver (No longer available)
Receivers
are like ice cream, they're all pretty good, but everyone has their
favorite flavor. After using some other brands that shall remain
nameless, Braden bought his first Denon receiver in 2001 and hasn't
looks back. It's been nothing but Denon in the Russell household,
including several others in other rooms of the house. The AVR 3806 has
it's rough edges, especially in setup and configuration, but it sounds
great and just flat out works. Not to say that there's anything wrong
with other brands, Denon just happens to be Braden's favorite flavor.
If you haven't tried it, you should at least give it a chance.
Speakers: Klipsch reference series (No longer available)
6 x
R-5800-C In-ceiling Loudspeakers
1 x
RC-7 Center channel speaker
1 x
RSW-12 Subwoofer
There's
not much more you can say about Klipsch that hasn't been said. They're
one of the biggest players in movie theater sound and they make great,
bang for the buck, home theater products as well. They've been around
for a long time and still do all their own design work. Many speaker
companies these days just buy outsourced horns and put them into pretty
packages. Klipsch is know for making very efficient speakers, so they
sound good not matter what you connect them to. They'll work well with
a bargain receiver, but sound amazing with a great amp. The in-ceiling
choice was mostly a requirement of the aesthetics committee, but also
worked better from a practical standpoint. The room doesn't have a
wall on the back or right side, so speaker placement is challenging.
The horns in the speakers can be aimed, giving exactly the same effect
you'd get if you mounted actual speakers to the ceiling and pointed
them down. The only drawback is the noise that feeds into the rooms
upstairs.
Blu-ray player: Sony PlayStation 3, 80 GB model (No longer available, 40 GB model: $399 MSRP)
Yes, the PS3 is in the home theater primarily as a Blu-ray player, but
it also happens to be a great gaming platform. Who knew? As a Blu-ray
player it's top notch, and now supports BD-Live for interactive Blu-ray
content. The expandability and upgrade-ability are great. You can
also use the PS3 to play movies, listen to music and look at picture
over your home network. The interface isn't ideal, but it works in a
pinch. Overall a great idea for those looking to buy into HD movies
now that there's a clear winner.
DVD Player: Toshiba HD-A2 HD-DVD Player (No longer available)
Sure
the PS3 could work as a standard DVD player, but the A2 does a great
job at upconversion, still allows for the occasional viewing of an
HD-DVD movie (like, let's say, Transformers or something like that),
and integrates really well into the Home Theater using an IR-based
universal remote. If you have an OPPO for DVDs, you don't need an
HD-DVD player, but if you don't have an upconverting player, by all
means pick up an HD-A3 for $80 bucks. It's still a no-brainer, even if
you never watch an HD-DVD on it in your life.
Remote: Logitech Harmony One Advanced Universal Remote (MSRP: $249,
Buy now)
This one is pretty self explanatory. Harmony remote. Touch screen. Cool and sexy. Enough said. For more detail check out
Episode #258.
HDTV Sources: Dish ViP622 and Motorola DCH3416 (Cox Cable)
Between
Dish, Cox Cable and Over the Air there's always something to watch in
high definition. Sure, the bills may be excessive, but it's all about
the podcast. What happens if we need to compare the quality of the
Super Bowl between Cable and Satellite, what ever would we do? Ok, so
maybe there's a slight addiction here, but we come to accept it, and so
has the finance committee.
Other bits and pieces:
The system requires an HDMI switch to make everything work. Braden has the 5x1 switch from
Monoprice
and it's perfect. Even running every component as HDMI only, there are
still way too many cables back behind the components. You have to
remember that they all need power, there's a ton of speaker wires, and
just about everything these days needs a network connection. That
brings us to the next piece, a 5 port Ethernet switch. These are a
dime a dozen, any brand works. Just make sure you get a switch and not
a hub. And for all those power cables Braden uses a
Monster reference power center, but mostly for the insurance policy.
Elsewhere:
How
can Braden be such a Panasonic Plasma nut and not have one in the home
theater? Great question. There are a ton of other devices scattered
around the house, including a Panasonic Plasma, a Samsung LCD, an XBox
and an XBox360, a couple OPPO DVD players, Logitech Squeezebox digital
music players, etc. But as for the home theater, that's what's there.
Looking at how many things are 'no longer available,' it might be the
right season for a few upgrades...