What would you do differently?

Travis Ballstadt

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They still have those?
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So, we likely all have at least a little bit of extra time on our hands, and I'm hoping to be moving cross country in the near future, which can only mean one thing: NEW THEATER BUILD.

Let's use this thread, not to show off what you have done, but let's talk about what you'd do differently if you could start all over again.
 
I'll start...

I would've spent more time on my riser and the flooring beneath. It's very creaky, but I don't want to rip the carpet off to tighten things down.

My current room is a weird situation in that it's not technically a part of the house, it's bonus space under what used to be a 3-season porch, but was enclosed when the 3-season porch was converted to a full sunroom. There's no HVAC, and no real foundation under the subfloor. Part of it has a small patio underneath, but for the most part, there's some hollow space.

If I could go back, I'd have done a better job sealing and bracing the subfloor, put new sheets of plywood down, and done a better job of squaring and securing the riser on top of that. The way it is now, I could solidify the riser, but the floor underneath still has a little bit of play to it, so it would still squeak.

IMG_3174.JPG IMG_3191.JPG IMG_4035.JPG
 
If I had not gotten married and subsequently divorced... twice. I would have had a lot more money to spend on my hobbies. That said, I never really did a Home Theater.
 
I'd build a isosceles trapezoid shaped room I think.. I could actually do this now by building a new wall, but it would be too much work.

I believe I would take my riser out... have some smaller chairs in the room for company, and focus on only the primary listening position being absolutely perfect.
 
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If I could go back and do everything differently, I'd probably concentrate efforts on building a front wall that's primarily an AT screen. What I lack is room size to sufficiently pull this off with tower speakers, and I've always been gun shy about installing in-walls.

My wife and are going to be empty nesters in a year... there always remains a possibility that we'll build a home in the coming years. If we do, I'll make sure the theater room is big enough to accommodate an AT screen with towers behind it.

Secondarily, if I were starting all over again, I'd go straight for the jugular with subwoofers. I wasted a lot of time and effort during the early years of my home theater piddling around with weaker subs. I say: go big, or hold your cash and SAVE to go big!
 
I'd build a isosceles trapezoid shaped room I think.. I could actually do this now by building a new wall, but it would be too much work.

I believe I would take my riser out... have some smaller chairs in the room for company, and focus on only the primary listening position being absolutely perfect.

Alright @Sonnie, drop some knowledge here... why the isosceles trapezoid shaped room?
 
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