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#31 | Link |
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Senior Member
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I have my projector setup in a 15 x 9 area with an 80 inch screen. The back 1.5 feet is shelves that the projector is on. I have to push my couch back when I use the projector, but other than that it works out perfectly. If you're willing to adjust your seating position when its movie time your room is plenty big.
-- jaydillyo |
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#32 | Link |
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Bass Member
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when the prices come down on a 65" 1080p lcd you can put the projector in another room or basement or something or for special occasion project it outside and have a nice portable HT
where would you hang the plasma anyway? You cant hang that from the ceiling so it would have to be behind the speakers, therefore you can put the proj screen behind the speakers and get 106" screen.
__________________
Barry Bonds hit me 83 this year. Roethlisberger throw me 48 TD's the other year. |
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#34 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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As much as I love my PJ, I don't think I'd go thru the install, wiring, etc for a 50" screen.
Can you do a digital RP TV? You can get a 46" to 50" Samsung DLP or a Sony LCD for about $1200-$1,400. In a set that size and your seating area I would not even worry about 1080p. Stick to 720p, more then enough. If you got to hang on a wall, there are some "off brand" LCD & Plasmas worth looking at. Or if you can live with 42" you can get the Panny Plasma in that range. |
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#35 | Link | |
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Advanced Member
AVS CLUB MEMBER
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Quote:
Good luck with your decision. |
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#36 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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Some good points have been made both for and against (that's why I posted in here, so thanks).
To recap: After measurements, I can accommodate a 65 inch screen size--not big by projector standards, but a huge step up from 32 inches at 4:3 on a standard TV. My HT system is already all set up (I have the full 5.1 complement of speakers, the receiver, the dvd player, etc.), so that isn't really an issue. The room is painted a dark forest green and I have complete light control. So that's not a problem. In Canada, TV prices are not as proportionally low as they are in the US, so they are less of an advantageous alternative than they might appear in the US. Conversely, while "sneaking in" a plasma (or any TV) across the border would be impossible (and after all the paperwork hassle, taxes and exchange rate issues, not to mention the fuel cost to the nearest US store that offers decent TVs, the savings would be almost nil), "sneaking in" a projector is a simple matter as I cross the border once a week for work and I always carry my laptop. It would be a simple matter to bring back a projector and have be part of my work gear, so I can take advantage of the great prices on projectors in the US, should there not be any decent prices on projectors in Canada. No one operates the system if I'm not there. My wife is perfectly content to watch TV and movies on the living room TV (a 27 inch version of my 32 inch TV) and my kids are still years away from operating anything as valuable as an HT system without my supervision. All that said, I am simply considering different options that will allow me to improve my movie viewing experience at a reasonable cost. I plan to have my wife borrow her work projector again, along with a proper screen this time (I used a makeshift white panel last time) and spend a whole weekend, rather than just a couple of hours, trying it out. This will cost me nothing and will give me a better idea if this is something that is A) feasible and B) that I want to do. Of course, tomorrow I'm going to help out my buddy set up his brand new 50 inch Panasonic plasma and I may come away from that experience (he's the only person I know who owns a plasma and I will be able to play with it as I wish, unencumbered by sales personnel) wanting to go that route instead. Hell, if anyone had asked me just a couple of weeks ago if I was interested in a projector, I would probably have laughed a bit and shrugged it off as impractical for my room. But my wife came home with the projector on a Friday night and asked if I'd like to try it. The setup wasn't ideal as the cable length was too short and I didn't have time to pull my player from the rack entirely (I won't bore you with all the annoyances I faced), so I ended up with a much smaller size than I'd ever consider worthwhile. However, the image was nice and started me thinking that this could be an affordable way to get a bigger screen for movies. Again, I thank everyone for their points of view and would like to hear more. |
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#37 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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Mounted only 6 feet from the screen, a Hitachi PJTX100 Ultravision can give you a 65" screen no problem. Since it is LCD, you can adjust the picture to be just about anywhere you want it. At that screen size and distance, you could have a glowing screen that would blind you even with the lights on.
In my setup, my PJ projects 10.5 feet but I have to roll my entertainment center to one side of the room to have enough room for the screen, 90". I have two floor to ceiling windows in the room that I normally pull the shades down in but from afternoon on, I really don't need to. Below, it is early evening, the NCAA game is on and I guarantee, the picture is at least this bright and could be much brighter - I have the brightness set to -16 on my HD70. The Hitachi is easily 1/5th to 1/10th what a panel would cost you and you still have the ability to set it up elsewhere, should you get the chance. Am I big on FP? Of course, but then I also promised myself I was never going to pay $1,000 or more for a tv. What do you think? At 65", that screen will be glowing! ![]() |
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#38 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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I just set up a 60 inch by 36 inch dry erase whiteboard and hooked up my wife's (admittedly not great) office projector to see if I could accommodate a projector/screen setup in my small room. The sheer jump in size (and I know a 65 inch diagonal is not all that big, but it's a big jump from my 32 inch CRT SDTV) made SERENITY a much more film-like experience--so I think it's time to find an inexpensive projector. My two candidates, so far, are the Hitachi PJTX100 and the Optoma HD70 (the latter concerns me a bit as it is a DLP and my wife's work projector is one as well--the rainbows were constant). I suspect her office projector is simply not up to the task of home theatre, but it makes me a bit leery of DLP.
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#39 | Link |
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Senior Member
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Go for it. You won't be disappointed with either projector. I have the Hitachi and love it even though mine seems to have a much louder fan that everyone else's.
The picture is great and even with a BOC screen it's very tolerant to ambient lighting. The thing would be a torch at the screen size you're talking about.Good luck!
__________________
--Elliott-- (gamertag: hoofdpijn) "Weck up to thees!" |
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#40 | Link | |
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Senior Member
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Well, here's my $.02. Sorry for the long post, but I hope this works.
Go for it! I have a living room (20' x 12.5') and it’s a living room with toys, pictures of the family, the dog and people walking around when we have parties, etc. This is no home theater, but I love it more because I use all the time and every single day. And when the kid goes to sleep, I lower the lights, snuggle with the wife and watch a movie on a great setup. I have an Optoma HD70 ceiling mounted set at 10.5' with an 80" 16:9 homemade screen using a paint formula found here (cost me about $75 to make). I wanted a TV in my living room not just a projector to watch movies, so I decided on getting the HD70 making a smaller then normal screen size so that I could have the lights on (and a decent amount of ambient light coming in the windows) while the kid is playing on the carpet and close enough to the wall so that people can get up and move around without walking in front of the projector. My main couch is set at 15' back from the screen. This is my TV! My wife works from home, the kid is still young (doesn't go to school) and grandpa watches the kid during the day. I am one of those parents that think TV is a good thing. The projector goes on at 7am and goes off about 10 at night. Since I installed my projector in November '06, I have clocked about 2200 hours...that's about 14 hours a day! Front: ![]() Side: ![]() Bugs! Rain Forest Sample from Discovery HD (DirecTV): ![]() |
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#41 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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Ovation:
I am doing a project somewhat similar to you. MIts HD1000u which will be ceiling mounted at ~8.5' throwing a 70' image. My 2 cents for you is: do it. At this distance you'll get a good bright image as mentioned, you can run the PJ in low lamp mode, extending the life to 3000 hours...your challenge as I have found will be (1) the screen. Not too many available fixed wall mounts under 77" (of course as soon as I say this a dozen posters will correct me ) so I'm doing the DIY route for the screen....a white wall will work but the wife wants a finished look and a DIY grey screen will improve your pic quality to a degree....I had Michaels build a 70" 16x9 screen for me with a low cost aluminum black frame with 2 sections of white foam board (<$100 total...I'm a lazy, lazy man ) ....I plan to get a 4x8' sheet of FPR from Lowes & paint it with Sherman Williams Grey Screen matte. (2) Mounting....you can get a decent celing mount from http://www.mountdirect.com/Mitsubish...unt_s/1430.htm but remember low cost DLP PJ's wont have much in the way of lens shift so to avoid major digital keystone correction, you may have to drop it with a pole several inches depending on your setup. LCD's in this price range can be more flexible however.One last item: Best Buys 30 day return policy is a beautiful thing for trying out such experiments on, say HD70 PJ's... ![]() Last edited by Karnis; 04-05-07 at 09:47 AM.. |
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#42 | Link | |
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The other OJ
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At first, my thoughts was "bad idea", but at 65" inches it really starts to become interesting. Considering that it doesn't seem to be a problem to you that you would have to dim the lights to get a good picture, I truly belive that if you do this install properly, you're never going to buy that 50" 1080P plasma that you're dreaming of. You're much more likely to upgrade the projector instead... In a lot of areas, a projector setup will simply give you a superior image. Even at only 720P, and with a larger screen size, the overall picture quality - at least with the lights off - will be better than a plasma, in my opinion. With such a small screen size, I'd do something like this: Get a really dark grey screen, and a projector that's capable of pretty high light output - the HD1000 would certainly be a possibility. The dark surface will REALLY help the picture quality with moderate light in the room, and with a small image size, a fairly high power projector can still create bright images. This is a much better route than blazing out as much light as possible, as a white screen will just reflect the room lighting as well. Basically: Definately go for it! Have fun, and if after say six months, you're getting tired of turning off the lights - you can tell yourself "oh well, I had fun, and now my 50" plasma has decreased in price anyway", and as others mentioned, then you still have the projector to play with on Superbowl night. So it probably won't cost you much. A cheap plasma as a temporary solution, will always just be "a step along the way", it won't give you the same enjoyment - it's money down the drain, considering you're going to replace it relatively soon.
__________________
Mvh. Otto, AV Precision Installer/Calibrator |
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#43 | Link | |
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AVS Special Member
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#44 | Link |
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Senior Member
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To help with what Otto said. I have an 80" for just the reason he mentioned. I wanted a projector that I could use during the day, I have 6 can lights and they all can be on, and I still get a good picture. Direct sunlight does hurt my picture, but ambient light no problem. And with that said I also "calibrated" more like adjusted my total picture in bright mode to accomidate lots of light in the room.
So, I have two settings. Normal and Bright. I hardly ever use Bright mode. But it does come in handy when I do get sunlight coming directly in my living during the winter months. |
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#45 | Link | |
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AVS Special Member
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Thanks for all the tips and encouragement. I think the white board will be my screen, at least initially, as it is exactly the size I want and the picture looked pretty good. If reflection becomes a problem, I expect I can spray paint it (either with a dull white or maybe a gray). Makes me want to place the order today, but I think I'll wait to see what my tax return looks like.
As for using it as a TV, I might do that when I make the move to HD cable, but the offerings on my side of the border in HD are not quite yet sufficient to justify the extra cost. I'll likelier get an HD DVD and/or Blu-Ray first (though even that won't be for some time as the discs are quite expensive in Canada and rental stores don't have many in stock). |
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#48 | Link | |
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AVS Special Member
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Quote:
__________________
Chris “It’s [expletive] lame to watch Jaws—a film that uses the 2.40 ratio as well as any ever produced—in the wrong format on HBO.” -Steven Soderbergh, Oscar-winning director |
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#49 | Link | |
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Auburn Tiger Monkey
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I agree.... <$1k for a quality 720p & plenty bright for *modest* ambient light viewing on <70" - bulb warranty "just in case"....... I'm in a 11.5x11.5 room w/ a DV10 - wanting to upgrade, just saving the scratch... I usually throw 64" (could go more, but overkill & only 480) - SS painted wall - could never go back to <42" and (even a year ago) paid less than most 42" today..... Will try to take & post some screen shots this weekend....funny, have had this for almost a year & never taken screen a shot .... Saving for the Hitachi & will use the DV10 for drive in movies & portability factor. Have a small gessoed premade canvas (30x40 - will give me 46" diag) I can use in bedroom/loft/living room - still "larger" than that 42" Will go to approx 80" with the Hitachi...... Last edited by rumonkey2; 04-06-07 at 07:42 AM.. |
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#50 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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I have an AE300 (ancient now I know) projecting on an 80" Hi-Power Da-Lite screen. I got it because it would be my only TV and I wanted something bright and punchy. It hasn't disappointed, even after 4.5 years, 3000+ hours and a faded bulb. I say go for it.
But seriously look into a pull-down, commercial screen. The Da-lites are pretty cheap... maybe $150 to $200 and they can be custom cut to the exact size you need. The quality will be light years better than a dry erase board and the installation will look a heck of a lot prettier. Here are some before and after pictures in my setup. I for one hate walking into a room and having a monster TV be the first thing I see. Using a projector allowed us to have a nice presentable living room during the day, while still having a kick ass movie experience at night. Screen Retracted Movie Time! By the way, the lights are that dark for photo reasons. We can watch with a reasonable amount of ambient light and still have a great picture. Don't let light shine directly on the screen and you should be ok. Enjoy and welcome to front projection. You'll be figuring out how to knock down walls so you can go up to a 120" screen in no time ![]() -Matt |
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#51 | Link | |
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AVS Special Member
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Quote:
One--I place the screen in front of my 32 inch (rather big and heavy) CRT SDTV because I want to use the screen only for movies (and the occasional playoff hockey game, if my team makes it). Two--I have my speakers in an approximate ITU configuration (geared for MCH hi-res audio playback) and the "approx" is already a compromise. I don't want to compromise that further. Three--the board is free and fits nicely in the available space (when I get a projector, I will be using, in 16:9, 57x32 of the 60x36 surface (maybe a bit more) and placing some sort of black felt/cloth to hide the rest. I want to try it as is with whatever projector I get and if I need to paint/cover the board with something, I'll do so). What I like about the projector option, as I consider it more and more, is the flexibility it offers for the future. When HD programming is sufficiently diverse to make the cost worth it in my area, I will spring for an HD DVR and the HD package. At that point, I will move my TV into the kid's play area (there is a 20 year old 19 inch TV in there now--they'll appreciate the upgrade) and that will give me the back wall (currently two feet behind where I place the screen) and, thus, a bigger screen in hi-def, with whatever projector I get soon, and its eventual replacement (as I can't see how a decent 1080p plasma or LCD flat panel with an 80 inch diagonal screen--about what my wall can give me--will be less expensive than a 1080p projector). |
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#52 | Link | |
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AVS Special Member
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#54 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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I live just outside of Montreal, in Quebec, so that's not an option. I'm willing to live with board I have now (part of the charm of the board is that it is free and so my wife is more amenable--she earns the big bucks, I'm the stay at home parent with a modest part-time income--to springing for a projector. Once she's watched some films on the "big screen", she'll probably want the upgrade. She, who wouldn't care if we only had the old 19 inch that's in the kid's playroom, found the short clip from Serenity I had on the other night impressive enough to encourage this plan--so one step at a time
). |
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#56 | Link |
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Advanced Member
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I haven't posted in a while, but wanted to chime in on this topic. I can't recommend a projector enough for you. I for one don't like the idea of having a big, expensive, heavy TV. Even Plasma is just not as convenient as havinga small projector you can carry around or light screen that can be rolled up when needed.
Admittedly best way is to hang the projector out of the way. But it is super flexible. And you can always go larger when the need arises or your situation changes. Try moving the giant 65" plasma without giving yourself a heart attack(I am a bit of a clutz) I tell you even cheap projectors throw a great image. I second the mention of buying a cheap screen. I bought a 103" Da-Lite screen for like 40 bucks from Provantage and that was like 3 years ago. Might be the same screen shown in the picture above. |
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#57 | Link |
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AVS Special Member
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Hi Ovation,
Regarding your pj selection, if rainbows 'jump out at you' when watching your wife's borrowed business projector ( probably 2x colour wheel ) there's a chance you'll even see them on higher speed wheel HT models. I have an HD1000, and although they don't bother me, I can see them frequently in bright / white scenes. I don't think I'm particularly rainbow sensitive, but the brightness of the HD1000 contributes I think. If they do bother you, and you can't preview a HD70 / HD1000 in your home, you're probably better going the LCD route. I've seen the Hitachi TX100 a number of times, and it has a good looking pic. It can be had for a great price south of the border ( if you plan on brining it across ). For just a little more, you can get the Sanyo Z5. The Z5 is a current generation PJ, where the TX100 is a couple of generations old now. The Z5 has a very wide zoom and lens shift range, making it very flexible for positioning. You could probably get away with mounting it on a shelf on your back wall and using the minimum (narrow) zoom. It's light output and good blacks would seem to match your requirements well. The Z5 can also be had for a very good price up here in Canada, and that would give you the advantage of a Canadian warranty. Hope this helps, Jonathan |
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#58 | Link | ||
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AVS Special Member
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#59 | Link |
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Senior Member
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A small distance and small screen can indeed work, how well might take some experimenting. I use an older Sayett Mediashow XC projector here in the bedroom which was once a professional LCD job I'm not looking for anything fancy for this, just something of the big screen experience in the bedroom. Since it was designed to be a pro projector it also means it is rather bright for this type of room I use a throw distance of just under 9 feet for 63 inches running across the room. Whatever its claimed brightness of my particular unit is supposed to be I have no idea but in direct comparison to a Sony I investigated at Best Buy they had going in one of the Magnolia rooms I'd guess it is at least twice as bright as that. This is from a dresser top (where I've got my surround sound, laserdisc, DVD and TV tuner) which can't be mounted perfectly flush with the wall, so with cords and cables behind the projector it is just under 9 feet. The 63 inch figure is arrived at due to a staircase that drops down through one corner of the room being the farthest right I can go, the left limit being the edge of the dresser which can't block a closet in the corner. Biggest concern I see here is making sure things don't look overly washed out from the brightness you'd encounter at those distances, so brightness settings and screen material would be my concern. I know in my particular setup the walls are an off almond color (not idea), and the projector is bright enough to put a rather useable image if the room is lit from overhead with a 100W bulb. I had a DaLite screen which proved to look too bright and eventually devised my own stretching a not too thick white sheet over a black painted board. There are probably other solutions, but for my cheapy bedroom setup right now I'm about 5 feet away from a 63 inch screen watching a movie so you do get a good feeling of the big screen experience.
FYI my particular projector can supposedly throw an image as small as 42 inches. So of course I had to try this and yea it will, but while the picture holds together quite well from a resolution standpoint its comparable to staring at the sun. I tried so merely out of curiousity. So I'm not gonna pick sides but plasma/LCD was impractical here in this room, I got a cheap projector and after a little tweaking it doesn't look bad for the purpose. |
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