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hi, Jim...<br><br>
do you use the screen for front or rear projection? if rear, is there a
hot spot?? i'm almost betting that one can seriously eliminate the hot
spot of you get the projector sufficiently off-axis.<br><br>
- adm -<br><br>
At 01:13 PM 3/5/04 -0700, you wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite>Guys,<br>
Another good choice for a projector screen is a white plastic sheet that
you can buy at Home Depot. I don't remember the name of it
now. Its actually used for waterproofing walls and comes in
something like 4x8 feet sheets. Its about 18 to 20
dollars. It has a gain of about 1 so it is basically the same
thing as buying a 1 gain screen. It works so well that many
people were using it for home theaters that the company that makes those
sheets made sheets that were bigger exclusively for HT users.
I made a wood frame for the one I made and painted it flat
black. It works really well. I compared it to
about 12 real screen material samples I have and you couldn't tell the
difference. Almost all 1 gain screens perform the same. You
really don't see differences until you get into the higher gains.<br>
Jim<br><br>
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<br>
Alan D.
Mazurka
adm.design@verizon.net <br>
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