View our Product Guide
Electronic House Newsletter   View sample
 
Popular Stories
View Home of the Year '09.
Recent Comments
Jerry (11/21, 06:18 PM)
Tony (11/21, 10:40 AM)
sunlcd (11/21, 10:21 AM)
sunlcd (11/21, 10:20 AM)
ugg cardy boots (11/21, 09:58 AM)
Recent Slideshow Galleries
9 Green (and Great!) TVs Paris Theme Illuminates Home Theater 20 Great Looking Racks DIYer Spends 3 Years Researching Theater 6 Products to Watch for in November The Holiday Gift Guide 2009 20 Leading Flat-Panel TVs 10 Manliest Man Caves The Best Blu-ray Releases of November 7 More Wiring Nightmares Inside Halloween Park’s Haunted House 16 Scary DVDs We’re Waiting for on Blu-ray 17 Scary Blu-rays for Halloween Careful Planning Keeps 12K-Square-Foot Home Running Smoothly N.Y. Yankees Pitchers Dig Home Theater Drastic Theater Reconfiguration Includes Hiding Bay Window
Info and Answers Feature
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
Standby power wastes energy and money, but there are easy ways to save.

Themed Home Theaters
View Designing a Death Star Theater
Designing a Death Star Home Theater
Three separate rooms, one starfield, and a life-sized Han Solo are just a few of the things that help two super "Star Wars" fans get their geek on in this theater.

Site Sections
Services
Media Room
Beginner Builds Theater for $8K
A spare bedroom, some extra cash and a lot of research helped this budding DIYer through a home theater installation.
July 25, 2007 | by Rachel Cericola

When some people want a home theater, they pick up a phone. Kevin Johnson picked up his tools. About 18 months later, he had a home theater.

Sure it may seem like a long time, especially in this “I-want-it-now” world, but Johnson has a day job, so he could only do work on nights and weekends.

It all started with a trip to a friend’s house—isn’t that always the way? Johnson was instantly bit by the theater bug. “I pushed the wife on this subject for a week or so before I went ahead and ordered our first projector [a Sanyo PLV-Z2],” Johnson says. 

After discussing a few locations with his wife, Johnson decided to use one of the six bedrooms in their home. It wasn’t too tough a decision. The walk-in closet was a perfect spot for equipment, and it was the only bedroom not attached to a bathroom (although how cool would that be?). It was actually “the only room she was comfortable losing,” he says.

The first incarnation worked. “Initially, we put an old blue sofa and two blue recliners in there and I constructed a homemade screen from ‘blackout’ cloth,” Johnson says. “This served as a temporary theater until I was able to order my fixed-frame screen, theater chairs, re-carpet, repaint, and fully convert the bedroom into a theater.”

While Johnson insisted on being hands on with everything, he did need help with the carpet and installing the seats. Otherwise, he took on construction of the screen, painting and wiring, speaker installation, A/V calibration and reversal of the door to allow for an easier entrance.

Before this project, Johnson’s handy experience was limited to ceiling fans, so this was quite a step up. “I learned mostly by doing,” he says. Aside from trial and error, he owes a lot of his installation experience to the people at AVS Forum. “There was tons of useful information to help me along my way.”

Johnson also researched each of his equipment selections to find the “best budget” item in each category. “I wanted great values, not the most expensive,” he says. The grand total for equipment, including seats, was $7,150. Carpet and other extras brought the grand total to just under $8,000. “I don’t feel we sacrificed quality in going so cheap,” Johnson says. In fact, Johnson sees it as an investment since they are saving money by making their own entertainment at home.

One of the things Johnson decided to change during the process was his projector. “I cannot handle single-chip DLPs,” he says. “The color wheel and I are not friends.” While the Sanyo had served him well, once the Epson with 1080p hit the market at an affordable price, he needed to make the move.

For daily viewing, there is a 61-inch JVC HD-ILA RPTV in Johnson’s family room, but he does make a point to spend daily time in his theater, whether it’s for movies, football or to watch “Lost” on a big screen.

While he may continue to tweak the room, Johnson has no regrets about doing the job himself. “My father-in-law recently constructed a theater with a custom installer,” he says. “The project ran him near six figures. While that is a drop in the bucket for him, I was on a serious mission to keep this project as cheap as possible.”

Cheap, however, doesn’t always translate to neat. In some areas, you might see a few exposed wires, but it’s nothing to worry about. “I’m sure the wiring could have been done neater and perhaps in the future I will spend some time cleaning up the wire management,” Johnson says. “I think that the primary use of theater room is to watch content not wires.”

So yeah—no regrets. In fact, he’s glad he did it his way. “My father-in-law has a 16 x 20-foot room with two subwoofers, B&W speakers, a $10,000-plus Runco projector,” Johnson says. “While his room is simply amazing, I was able to achieve a similar-if-not-better picture and comparable sound with components that cost way less.”

Equipment List

  • Epson Powerlite Home Cinema 1080p LCD Projector
  • Infinity SAT-750 Surround Speakers (3)
  • Insignia NSB-2111 Speakers (3)
  • Microsoft Xbox 360
  • Microsoft Xbox 360 HD-DVD Add-On Player
  • Onkyo SKW-K20 Subwoofer
  • Sony Playstation 3 (60GB) w/Bluetooth Remote
  • Sony STR-DG600 7.1 Receiver


About the Author:
Rachel Cericola - Contributing Writer
Over the past 15 years, Rachel Cericola has covered entertainment, web and technology trends. Check her out at www.rachelcericola.com.



Article Topics
Popular Tags
Social Bookmark   less


Comments (5) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by ELmO  on  10/16/07  at  10:08 AM

Don’t sell the epson 1080 short…

Excellent guideline on a cheap HT setup.

Posted by Lathode  on  10/06/07  at  08:07 PM

18 months to create that?!? Paint the walls… have carpet replaced and seats put in… setup the equipment, that’s a weekend of work. His picture is better than a $10k projector? His sound is better than his dad’s with those tiny speakers? Right… Don’t get me wrong, I’d love to have that setup, but don’t try and oversell it.

Posted by Kevin Johnson  on  07/28/07  at  08:41 AM

Wayne:  I got my theater seating from Gallery Furniture in Houston, TX.  They have a huge showroom with many configurations that you can actually sit in.  They also have several dedicated Home Theater rooms so you can get a feel for how the chairs would do in a real theater room.

TD:  I can’t take full credit for the sign.  Only partial.  If you go to AVSForum.com and go under the Theater Items and Accessories sub-forum, there is a thread regarding Marquees.  One of the forum members posted a photoshop file as well as intructions/materials needed to complete the sign.  I simply had him modify the photoshop file and then printed the sign and mounted it inside a 9x20 shadowbox.  Then, I hung it above the door.  Real easy and cheap too.  Around $35 in actual costs.

Posted by TDBolinger  on  07/27/07  at  09:50 AM

Where did the gentlemen get his personal marquee theater sign?  That’s way cool.

He did a very impressive job and now I want to do it.

TD

Posted by Wayne Pettyjohn  on  07/27/07  at  09:08 AM

Where did he get his theater seating?



Post a Comment

Name:

Email:


View comment guidelines

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please answer the question below:

Type the 2nd letter of the word "speaker":





Learn more about products and solutions from tech companies.
Electronic House magazine's 2009 Best Homes of the Year special.
Electronic House reviews the coolest products of the year.
Visit the Electronic House Ideas store & get more out of your home!

Stay up-to-date with home electronics. Get your print subscription today.
Weekly email offers tips, info and product news.
Subscribe today!
Get the content that's important to you.
More about RSS.
Electronic House is now available in a digital edition. Learn more.
About us Advertise Magazine Newsletters Digital issues EH Publishing Privacy policy Contact us
 Copyright © 2006 EH Publishing. All rights reserved.
EH Network: CE Pro TecHome Builder ChannelPro ProSoundWeb Church Production Electronic House Expo Worship Facilities Expo