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The Best Gear for Building Your Home Theater

  Everyone loves watching a great movie on a big screen with a kickass speaker system, but few would complain about losing the sticky floors, uncomfortable seats, and kids with smartphones (unless they’re your own kids). Our A/V team spends thousands of hours each year to find the best looking and sounding home theater equipment. Whether you have a dedicated theater room planned or are thinking of upgrading your weeknight living room movie night, we have recommendations covering whatever space and budget you have. Almost all of these recommendations (and more) are available in our Theater Audio,TVProjector, and Theater Extras categories, but we understand that it’s not totally clear how everything fits together. This guide compiles everything you need in one place, along with some new reviews of stuff like projector ceiling mounts and TV wall mounts not covered elsewhere. You’d be surprised at how little it can cost to upgrade your at-home movie-watching setup from functional to enjoyable. For less than $1,000, our $500 TV and budget soundbar will offer a huge step up in quality from most existing setups and leave enough money in the budget for a Blu-ray player and universal remote. The same goes for the cost of a high-performance dedicated theater compared to what home theater enthusiasts would have you believe. Our best home theater projector, screen, receiver, and speaker system cost less combined than the street price of a single 4K projector    So you’ve got a basement, attic or spare bedroom you want to convert into a theater. That’s awesome. Your neighbors will be jealous. In a dedicated room, we’ll assume you have control over the ambient light—light leaking in from doors or windows—and that you can make it completely dark when it’s time to press play. Additionally no one should be surprised or bothered by the sight of big speakers and subwoofers position around the space. A projector hanging from the ceiling also won’t look out of place. Dedicated home theater rooms also let you go a little wild with the decor. You may not be able to get away with a life-size Chewbacca cutout in your living room, but movie-themed accessories are great additions to a home theater. If you have a space that fits this description, you should go big. Literally. That means a projector, screen, and surround system. Even with high-end equipment, a projector and large screen will generally give you more display for the dollar. (Well, not at the seriously high end, but we’re not recommending these for DIY theaters.) Don’t assume that any space is good enough, even if it’s dark and soundproof. Measure first to make sure you have the wall space for a screen of at least 100 inches and the throw distance to match your projector to that screen.   Modern high-end TVs look beautiful and can deliver awesome picture quality despite their wafer-thin designs. What they can’t do is deliver audio performances to match. There’s just no getting around the laws of physics: The thinner TVs become, the less space is available in their chassis to house quality speakers. The result? Muddy dialog. You need to crank up the volume just to hear what’s being said. Bass? Are you kidding me! What bass? If you’re serious about getting the best experiences from TV shows, movies, and music videos, you need a dedicated audio system. If find the prospect of setting up a true surround-sound system with sonically matched components to be too daunting and expensive of a prospect, consider purchasing a home theater in a box . So if you are looking to buy TVs and Home theaters visit Allindiayellowpage.com to  get information about Home Theaters available stores in your area.