Wireless surround sound

Joined
28 June 2002
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287
Location
Corrales, NM
I am in the process of negotiating the purchase of a new house and there is an option for pre-wiring for surround sound. Is there a product out there that will allow me to use my existing speakers but convert to a wireless system? If so, it may be cheaper for me to go with the wireless.
 
Hm interesting question, where does the power come from if they work wireless the audio signal shouldn't be a problem but electricity should be pretty difficult.. right?
 
I personally wouldnt want to rely on a wireless system to deliver high quality audio. Hard wired is best and subject to less RF interference IMO.
 
You just can't beat a hard-wired system. Since you're building, run good quality speaker wires and cables to the points you need and don't stress yourself out with a wireless system that is sure to sound inferior.
 
12AMNSX said:
I am in the process of negotiating the purchase of a new house and there is an option for pre-wiring for surround sound. Is there a product out there that will allow me to use my existing speakers but convert to a wireless system? If so, it may be cheaper for me to go with the wireless.

Forget wireless. What are they offering you and how much is it? I can probably help you if you let me know, this is my line of work.
 
One more post against the wireless idea. To me, wireless sound is only if you don't want to rip apart your walls. Since you don't even have walls, go for broke and wire the hell out of it. I'd even run Cat6 networking, coax, and phone wire all around the house. It's much easier and cheaper to do it before the walls go on.
 
So I poped for the builder to hard wire it. It's a rip off at $370, but I don't have much choice. I would do it myself after the home is built (I can't modify or change anything until the home is done and I own it) but it has a truss ceiling and a flat roof so getting wires through the ceiling area will be a major pain.

What gauge speaker wire should I make sure they use?
 
12AMNSX said:
So I poped for the builder to hard wire it. It's a rip off at $370, but I don't have much choice. I would do it myself after the home is built (I can't modify or change anything until the home is done and I own it) but it has a truss ceiling and a flat roof so getting wires through the ceiling area will be a major pain.

What gauge speaker wire should I make sure they use?

Well, I think first of all you should make sure the speakers are in the correct locations. Use 14 guage or larger. Make sure you are also wired for a subwoofer and that the wiring is correct. Your display device's outlet should be surge protected. You can get a cheap in-wall from Panamax as a minimum. Try to get a long HDMI or DVI cable to the display as well as component video (3 runs of quality RG-6 can work), run a CAT5e or two for future use like a VGA run or anything else.

Make sure the distance between the front L&R is the same or more than the distance of your center to your seating location.

Wire for 6.1 or 7.1 if you can, 6.1 will have a center dead center rear, 7.1 will have two rear, place them at about a 40 degree angle to your seating position if possible... if its in the wall, place them 18-24" above seated ear height. Same with side surrounds.

The outlet for your elecronics, your display, and your subwoofer should be on the same circuit. Dedicated, from the panel. You may end up with ground loops otherwise.
 
The Yamaha unit is a bargain because it includes a basic preamp to switch video signals and it also has built in amps. Therefore no external amp or processor is necessary, and you get a lot of bang for the buck.

Installation is fairly straightforward, and its functionality is adequate for a basic system.

If the room is setup well for it, you have a front wall and somewhat equidistant sidewalls, its processor is fantastic. Its effects will make you swear there are side surround speakers. This is a whole level beyond the 3-speakers-in-a-long-bar type of things others offer.

You'll need a subwoofer with it. Bass is minimal.

If your room is not setup like I described, the effects can suffer... but its still not bad. Just not nearly as good.

There is a digital issue they suffer from in that sometimes with Motorola cableboxes that will emit a digital noise that sounds like a "squeak" on certain selection of menu items. But its a quick thing and it goes away. There is just this compatibility issue I know of.

Overall I recommend the unit, its a good solution. Another great solution if you are more of an audiophile are Artison speakers that mount directly to the sides of the plasma and match its size and color... These are the best I have used to date... and I have used almost everything. They are phenomenol in sonic quality.

here is a link:

http://www.artisonusa.com/documents/Masterpiece.pdf

PM me if you have more questions.
 
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