Home Forums Chat Forum Do people still do home cinema surround sound?

Viewing 31 posts - 41 through 71 (of 71 total)
  • Do people still do home cinema surround sound?
  • TurnerGuy
    Free Member

    If the OP is near Surrey then I have a near mint Denon 1312 going for £50.

    I was my MILs (a complicated setup so her near deaf hubby could hear the TV) but she has no need for it now 🙁

    It had a Denon speaker system but it was pretty poor so I dumped it.

    The reviews were pretty good and it has the advantage of hdmi switching, which I think it rare in cheaper stuff.

    http://www.expertreviews.co.uk/tvs-entertainment/av-receivers/51006/denon-avr-1312-review

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Denon-AVR-1312-5-1-AV-Receiver/dp/B004W1LWDW

    gofasterstripes
    Free Member

    Klunk just proved my point.

    twonks
    Full Member

    I built a sort of discreet surround sound platform in our main lounge.

    Rear speakers can be hidden ish.

    Sound bars just don’t cut it for me. To be truly immersive nothing beats propper speakers, decent subwoofer and a HD projector 🙂

    grantmccall63
    Free Member

    Have an Arcam AVR400, a set of Tannoy Eyris Floorstanders and Centre and an XXLS400 sub in gloss white. Looks cool but the benefit of centralised quality vocals makes is worth the investment. Sounds bars or single box doesn’t really come close

    5thElefant
    Free Member

    I built a sort of discreet surround sound platform in our main lounge.

    No, you really didn’t. 😯

    CountZero
    Full Member

    My surround system is pretty archaic by modern standards, it’s got to be ten years old now, it cost me £750, but was worth £1500, demo kit sold cheap because the shop was being re-fitted, and I knew the bloke, I’d worked in the shop before.
    Yamaha DSP amp, and Sony sub/satellites, a bit like the KEF eggs.
    Got the sky box, Mac Mini and my Cambridge Audio DVD99 hooked up via TOSLink optical and HDMI, it’s great having surround for TV programmes when you suddenly hear someone walk out of shot and footsteps go behind you then a door slams.
    The centre speaker makes a huge difference to voice, and the system works well for music in stereo, by just switching off the effects.

    tomtomthepipersson
    Free Member

    We moved house about 9 months ago and I baggsied a small (8x13ft) room and told the misses it was going to be my projector room. To my surprise she said OK. So now I have an Onkyo amp in there running some Miller & Kreisel 5.1 speakers. Sounds bloody brilliant and theres a nice big (8ft wide) picture from a 1080p projector.

    There’s loads of good secondhand kit around (eBay, AVforums etc) so it’s easy to put something together cheaply.

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    Can’t recommend that BK sub highly enough. I bought one when my Monitor Audio sub went pop. bK cost less than the sub it replaced but a world away sonically.

    cloudnine
    Free Member

    Can recommend BK Electroncics for a sub..
    Have the XXLS400 and it really adds that extra dimension to films.

    Also have 2 large Dali Floorstanders, centre and wall mounted rears

    Drac
    Full Member

    Rear speakers can be hidden ish.

    hidden
    ?h?dn/Submit

    adjective
    kept out of sight; concealed.
    “hidden dangers”
    synonyms: concealed, secret, not visible, invisible, unseen, not on view, out of sight, covered, camouflaged, disguised, masked, shrouded, veiled, unrevealed
    “they watched the action through a hidden camera”

    gofasterstripes
    Free Member

    NXT panels for rears?

    Klunk, that read wrong. What I mean is the Q150e was a BK rebadged 🙂

    CHB
    Full Member

    My set up is 14 years old and is still pretty good. Yamaha 5.1 amp and a full set of B&W speakers.
    Thick cable run discretely under the living room floor.
    I do keep looking at the newer amps with HDMI and 4K upscaling. But for now good 5.1 and 1080p is absolutely fine, and other things can drain my finances instead.
    Sadly its of most use when playing Call of Duty… very helpful to hear who/what is coming. 🙂

    vorlich
    Free Member

    I used to have a BK Gemini hooked into my Yamaha soundbar, but didn’t really rate it TBH, lower down their range than the XLS admittedly.

    I still have the soundbar, but now find myself in a new house with approval for a cinema room, no budget to do much with it yet. But eventually hope to get a projector and maybe proper surround setup. We just decided it’s daft having a dedicated guest bedroom, when it would only get used a handful of times throughout the year.

    twonks
    Full Member

    Well ok then mine isn’t exactly discreet, but now it’s built it looks a lot less intrusive than the components on big stands along a wall.

    All a matter of opinion just like somebody on avforums asking if there is a point in ‘expensive’ bikes

    robdob
    Free Member

    I have a basic cinema system with proper sized speakers – love it!

    A friend has a mahoosive HD projector system (I asked him how much it cost – as much as a family car was the answer) with £8k worth of Monitor Audio floor standing fronts and rears and matching centre, with a monster sub (as big as a small dryer). Beautifully set up and amazing to watch a film on. I’ve never been to a cinema which even comes close to how good it is. A lot of money for sure but it is just “wow!”

    thetallpaul
    Free Member

    KEF eggs (2005.1 if googling), matched with a Sony 1040 amp. Blinkin’ awesome sound. No distortion at any volume, and clarity is wonderful.
    Wife even likes the look of the speakers.

    Managed to pick up a set of 5 eggs and two subs for £175 from ebay, and then another 2 eggs for £25. Both were local auctions, so prices were lower than you see generally.

    Do it!

    mrmoofo
    Free Member

    I have tinkered in the world of surround sound for years now – I am on my 4th amp.
    So far I have gone ethrough a Sherwood system with JBL speakers, a Marantz with missons speakers, the same Marantz with B&W speakers, then a Denon with the same speakers and now a Arcam amp with a Cambridge minx system…
    TBH, i was a bit of a klutz for many years and didn’t use the digital inputs so only got psuedo surround sound. I still am not overly sure what all the various options re Dolby/ Dolby II/ Neo whatsit really give ….

    Movies do sound great, but as with so much these days the mix is so “loud”. The voice track is hidden – and in most cases, barely audiable. This means that the bangs and crashes are very, very loud. You have two choices, you run the centre speaker turned up to max, or you sit on the remote and the minute anything starts expolding , you turn down the sound.

    Other factors – I am beginnng to see the whole surround sound set up as a bit “chav”. It’s a little like having your own bar in the living room, or red leather furniture ….
    Obvious wifey hates it – and for two reasons 1) it is complicated to switch on, even with an intelligent remote, it sometimes fails 2) it looks ugly. Speakers everywhere and unless you dig up the floor boards, wires everywhere.

    I have just moved so I am going through the decision process – the floors are about to be done. Do I get the wires buried for the surround sound, or do I not bother and just go the sound bar / sound base route?

    I have all the equiment I need but I am not too sure I can be bothered any more!

    The Hi-fi has been rigged up in the second reception room, for just that. Most of the stuff I play go is streamed / itunes based and go through a good quality DAC. So that sounds great and that may well suffice.

    So much of TV is not really digital surround sound decoded but just is dolby II etc – movies, of course are.
    But then I have to listen to them so loud just to hear what is being said …

    However, all this said , modern TV speakers are truly rubbish!

    br
    Free Member

    Speakers everywhere and unless you dig up the floor boards, wires everywhere.

    So you’ve spent loads of money over many years and never buried the cables? 🙄

    When we first discussed surround sound my Missus just said “do what you want, but no wires”. So I took a week off and redecorated the lounge (after channelling the walls and installing speaker plates etc).

    When we moved a couple of years ago first priority was to wire in the speakers (and additional power) so the lounge could then be decorated. If you do it this way, no worry over mess as everything is covered up.

    And tbh when your lounge is 6m x 8m and over two storeys high, normal TV speakers just can’t cut it 🙂

    mrmoofo
    Free Member

    TBH, I never knew you could – and have never heard of speaker plates! So off to google.

    Ah ! Shame to room has just been redecorated!!
    They would be nice , and sill an opportunity for cables to go under the floor

    Some house were rented, with expensive floors and underfloor heating (CH) so was never an option!

    The room is 4 X 4 metres with high Victorian ceilings (3.5 metres)

    None of this stops the fact that voice tracks are still buried in the mix – unless anyoen can tell me a solution.

    stenhousemuir
    Free Member

    That just sounds like your settings need tweeking mrmoofo. Google how to factory reset your amp, then start again setting it up, measuring the distances from your listening position to each speaker and inputting it into the amp

    thetallpaul
    Free Member

    We never have a problem hearing dialogue, even in scenes with obscuring background noise.
    Amp does have a calibration mic though, and then tweaked from there until all nicely set up.
    Even have an option to enhance dialogue, but have not needed to use it yet.
    Make sure speakers are in correct positions for your amp. I found out that the setup for mine was 1 centre, 2 front satellites and 2 SIDE satellites, not rears as previous prologic 1 system. That’s why I have two spare satellites for when we extend the living room and can fit the 2 rears as well and hide all of the wires.

    deadkenny
    Free Member

    b r – Member
    So you’ve spent loads of money over many years and never buried the cables?

    Mine are trailed around the skirting, along with Ethernet cable as well, but then there’s no OH to complain about it.

    Oddly though I still don’t have a sub. My ancient Mission speakers chuck put a fair bit of bass and there’s enough rumble from them with the sub frequencies directed to them. As it’s a flat I’ve always been reluctant to get a sub and piss off the neighbours.

    Dialogue vs rear, I find similar problems, though mainly from some TV shows where the rear overpowers the dialogue. All been set up with the calibration mic.

    conkerman
    Free Member

    Yamaha Amp and Venerable but still bloody good B&W M1 based system.

    All in a Skovby cabinet with IR repeater. Nice 🙂

    ‘Almost’ all wires hidden.

    br
    Free Member

    None of this stops the fact that voice tracks are still buried in the mix – unless anyoen can tell me a solution.

    Check your centre speaker, and its settings.

    Speaker plates, cheap as.

    http://www.audiomate.co.uk/proddetail.php?prod=Signal-Outlet-Plate-with-4mm-Banana-Sockets&gclid=CMjai4Ghm8QCFSYHwwodPYEAfA

    You can spend far more too 🙂

    gonzy
    Free Member

    i use a 20 year old Ariston AX-910 amp and even older Wharfedale speakers. i also run a pair of Bose speakers from the amp. the sound quality is awesome IMO and the amount of bass produced means that i dont need a subwoofer…yet

    mrmoofo
    Free Member

    br – too late for speaker plates.
    Room just decorated ( with eye poppingly expensive wall paper and decorator!)

    So it will be pine coving around the skirting if floor man can’t do it

    ericemel
    Free Member

    I think the quality of soundbars and reduced quality of audio on streamed video has made soundbars a very popular option rather than full surround sound.

    Saying that I have a proper 5.1 system* – which is in constant use and no rush to go back – absolutely love it and the luckily my wife does too.

    It always shocks me how bad TV’s sound!

    *5xSpendor speakers, Naim process and amps all around plus REL sub.

    2unfit2ride
    Free Member

    I still use keff Ci eggs (better than the standard plastic ones) in white to blend with the white walls, but I suffered with the centre channel & ended up getting an Infinity CC225 which is quite big but has really changed how the dialogue is presented, the best bit though is an old REL Stadium 11 that I picked up ex demo for much cheapness, its that big that I use it as a side table next to the sofa 🙂

    CountZero
    Full Member

    Movies do sound great, but as with so much these days the mix is so “loud”. The voice track is hidden – and in most cases, barely audiable. This means that the bangs and crashes are very, very loud. You have two choices, you run the centre speaker turned up to max, or you sit on the remote and the minute anything starts expolding , you turn down the sound.

    A good amp should give you the facility for going into settings, and adjusting the volume for each individual speaker, plus the sub should have its own individual volume control, so you should never struggle with voice volume or clarity on the centre speaker. My Yamaha must be at least ten years old now, and allows me to do this via its own display and the remote. Microphone calibration didn’t exist, except on very high-end amps, and mine retailed for £1000! The Sony speakers were another £500. I got the lot for half that.
    A really good amp with wifi/Airplay, Internet streaming, 4K upscaling, etc, can be picked up for £250 now.

    simonlovell999
    Free Member

    7.1 setup here for bluray

Viewing 31 posts - 41 through 71 (of 71 total)

The topic ‘Do people still do home cinema surround sound?’ is closed to new replies.