Making Your Room’s Acoustics Work for You

Nothing beats immersing yourself in your custom home theater. But to truly capture the majesty and magnificence of your favorite films, you need to make the most of your room’s acoustics. Staying conscious of how your room interacts with the sound from your home automation products can go a long way towards getting optimum custom home theater sound. Southwest Audio Visual is committed to ensuring the room you’ve chosen for home theater installation is working with you—not against you.

Balance Direct Sound and Reflected Sound

Custom home theater acoustics can be tricky. Therefore, it’s important to keep a balance between direct and reflected sound in home theater installation. While you may be satisfied with the direct sound waves that reach you from the speakers, you may be missing out on reflected sound waves helping them achieve a fuller sound. Therefore, the placement of your home automation system is of utmost importance.

What you need is a mix of diffusive materials and absorption materials.

Diffuse the Situation

It’s no use to completely rid your room of reverb—an overly dampened room can be just as ineffective as an under-dampened one. Many diffusive materials, such as wood, feature hard, uneven surfaces to help scatter sound around the room. Typically placed on walls and ceilings, diffusors can help make full use of your sound to truly immerse yourself in your films. If your theater is a multipurpose room, diffusing sound can be as simple as spacing out books on a bookcase so the sound has more space to move.

Absorb, Absorb, Absorb!

You should also add absorption elements that will catch those pesky sound waves bouncing around your room. This can be as involved as adding “egg crate” foam pads to your home theater installation, or as simple as hanging heavy curtains over your windows. Luckily, a wireless home automation system ensures the curtains won’t interfere with their function, and will leave you free to enjoy your film without worry of something catching.

These are just some of the basics. When you call SWAV, you can count on us to make sure your custom home theater is operating at its utmost efficiency. A proper home theater installation may take extra effort, but it’s well worth it!

5 Ways to Transform Your Room into a Personal Movie Theater

Since your first encounter with the silver screen, a possibility has presented itself: What if you could recreate this experience in your own home? With home theater installation from Southwest Audio Visual, you can create the in-home movie theater you’ve always dreamed of with our expert home automation system. Here are five things that we feel are absolute must-haves for transforming your room into a personal movie theater:

Initially, a big screen TV can single-handedly drive your vision for home theater installation. After all, a big screen TV has an immediate “wow” factor that even non-tech savvy types can appreciate. So believe us when we say that investing in a top-quality high definition television can go a long way towards selling your audience on your home theater install.

High-quality surround sound speakers are integral to recreating the thunderous sound of a real movie theater. Our home theater installers can seamlessly integrate them into your home theatre installation, so your viewers aren’t tripping over wires in the dark.

Speaking of the dark, your home theater installation can greatly benefit from lighted floors, as well as from dimming lights. SWAV can give you a fully-automated home theater installation that lets you control the lighting at will, so you can let the audience know when it’s show time.

While a full-scale ticket booth may not fit inside your house, you can add plenty of other stylistic touches to your home theater. Install cosmetic additions such as a popcorn machine or a grand, red curtain to give your home theatre installation that essential “box office” touch.

The sky’s the limit when it comes to home theater installation. Let Southwest Audio Visual’s talented home theater installers help you make your dream a reality with our custom home theater installation!

Why Sound Quality Matters on Your Home Entertainment System | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

In San Diego, movies and music make up a good majority of our entertainment, but these experiences become that much more enjoyable when they produce high-quality sound we can appreciate. Here are a few reasons why superior sound quality matters for any home theater San Diego entertainment experience:

Continue reading Why Sound Quality Matters on Your Home Entertainment System | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

7 essential albums for eclectic music lovers | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

Dedicating oneself to a single music genre is just fine, but to truly take advantage of your custom home theater you should consider exposing yourself to a wide variety of styles. A home automation system lets you fully appreciate your varied tastes with the best sound possible. If you take pride in being an eclectic music lover, here are seven classic albums that your collection should not be without:

Continue reading 7 essential albums for eclectic music lovers | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

What your home entertainment system says about you | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

It may come as a surprise that home theater installation says a lot about you. When you choose to build a custom home theater, you’re providing your house with more than just the best home automation products—you’re defining yourself as a person. Want to know more? Then read on!

Continue reading What your home entertainment system says about you | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

How Your Life Can Benefit From Home Automation | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

You may not realize it, but we’re living in a future of endless possibility. While we have yet to zip around in flying cars and hire robots do our chores, the futuristic appeal of home automation systems can serve a much more practical role in our lives. Here’s how your own life can benefit from a home automation system:

Continue reading How Your Life Can Benefit From Home Automation | Southwest Audio Visual Blog

Choosing the right home automation system in San Diego | SWAV Blog

Choosing the right home automation system can be a daunting task in San Diego. Audio video home entertainment is a high priority for you, but it can be overwhelming to consider the home automation products available to you. Luckily, you can narrow down your options with these home automation system suggestions.

Continue reading Choosing the right home automation system in San Diego | SWAV Blog

Savant Brings ‘Big Boy’ Home Automation to Mainstream

Today, if you want Savant home automation system, the price of entry is about $4,000. But the maker of Apple-friendly home controls is rolling out a “system” at CEDIA Expo 2013 that starts at $999 for a controller and slick handheld remote.

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The key is a new $500 Gateway nicknamed Big Boy Automation—as in, not a wimpy little box that Comcast sells you. The Linux box, expected to ship in Q1 2014, features the full Savant software and does not require a Mac Mini on the network (although one can be added to enhance the system).

The Gateway is packaged with Savant’s new $499 Wi-Fi universal remote, the SUR-0500.

A kit that includes one Wi-Fi dimmer/keypad one Wi-Fi thermostatand user license (both iOS and Android) will retail for $1,499.

A security-centric package is on the way.

Savant’s Jim Carroll tells CE Pro that commercials from home automation mass-marketers are driving consumers to specialty dealers.

They tell him, “We need to be relevant. … Here, I’ve got something for $1,000.”

The Gateway includes IR, two RS-232 ports and two GPIOs. It “can do everything a full-blown million-dollar Savant system can do,” Carroll says, but a full “luxury license” will be required … and of course a lot more I/Os.

Savant only recently launched a line of Wi-Fi dimmers and is adding to the Internet of Things category with $99 Wi-Fi plug-in modules and smart power supplies.

Savant Unveils Self-Configuring Universal Remote Control

Savant Systems has introduced the Wi-Fi-based Savant Universal Remote that offers control of audio/video, distributed audio, lighting, climate control and other features.

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The Savant Universal Remote is self-configuring once connected to the network, eliminating the complex programming. The user interface device supports a menu of screens for controlling services throughout the home, and because it utilizes Wi-Fi connectivity, users can control devices without pointing or aiming—no direct line of sight is required.

“Wi-Fi is the worldwide standard for residential and commercial wireless networking, and this new remote will affordably deliver the control capabilities our customers want by leveraging the network that already exists in their home or business,” explains Jim Carroll, Savant’s executive vice president corporate strategy and business development.

The Savant Universal Remote features a 1.7-inch color display and backlit buttons, which clearly illuminate essential navigation keys. The Savant Universal Remote has an ergonomic design featuring a customizable color display and a full complement of hard buttons for frequently used functions. Features include two-way feedback from supported devices and transport buttons enabling users to navigate Savant’s TrueCommand on-screen navigation technology.

When used within a Savant control ecosystem, the Savant Universal Remote is capable of two-way Wi-Fi communication, giving users control of intelligent devices and subsystems from anywhere in the house or facility. If the remote becomes lost or damaged, no programming is required to activate a replacement – simply log the new remote onto the network and full functionality will automatically be restored. Savant authorized integrators can also upload feature changes and firmware updates remotely, adding value for users while enhancing overall efficiency.

Integra Adds HDBaseT for Newest AV Processor, Receiver

Integra has introduced its new mid-range THX Certified AV preamp processor and AV receiver, the DHC-60.5 and DTR-60.5.

Both are the first Integra products to support HDBaseT technology, which allows HD audio/video signals to be transmitted over much longer distances and uses cables that are much more commonly available, less expensive, and easier to field terminate and install in customized lengths than HDMI.

By incorporating HDBaseT technology, the DHC-60.5 and DTR-60.5 are optimized for whole-home distribution and can connect to compatible entertainment devices through a single CAT5e/6 cable. HDBaseT is the only technology that enables long-reach wired connectivity up to 328 feet (100 meters) for uncompressed full HD multimedia content including 3D and 2K/4K Ultra HD making it ideal for the custom integration specialists. The HDBaseT port can be assigned for use in either the main zone or a second zone, while the HDMI output is used exclusively for the main zone.

“The addition of HDBaseT in these two new models help address an issue many in the custom installation market deal with; providing HD quality over long distances,” said Keith Haas, director of sales. “Implementing technologies like HDBaseT allows us to continue to provide products people have come to expect from the market leader. With this addition along with built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, unparalleled streaming service options, THX Certified sound quality, ISF Certified Calibration Control, and ongoing support upgrades, our customers get new value added on a regular basis.”

The new DHC-60.5 7.2 channel network AV preamp processor is THX Ultra2 Plus Certified and the ideal companion to the DTA-70.1 THX Ultra2 certified amplifier. The DHC-60.5 also includes built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth and full support for the new 4K Ultra HD video displays using either the 4K pass-through feature or up-scaling for conventional SD and HD video sources via a Marvel QDEO processor. There are connections for nine HDMI inputs and one output, plus HDBaseT, along with 7.2 multichannel balanced XLR pre-outs (with front-channel bi-amp capability) and two-channel balanced XLR audio inputs.

Meanwhile, the DTR-60.5 is a 9.2 channel, THX Select2 Plus network AV receiver that boasts 135 watts per channel of power.

The DTR-60.5 supports an abundant package of connectivity options including 9-in/1-out HDMI, the aforementioned HDBaseT port, and 11.2 multichannel pre-outs to support full DTS Neo:X up-mixing for surround-sound playback. If preferred, the unit can be configured to assign four of the nine available channels to drive audio in Zone 2 and Zone 3 simultaneously. There is a full package of surround processing including Dolby Pro-Logic IIz and Audyssey DSX, plus Audyssey MultEQ XT32 room set-up processing. Amplification comes courtesy of proprietary WRAT (Wide Range Amplifier Technology) and discrete Three-Stage Inverted Darlington Circuitry, a combination that preserves a distinctively musical sound even at high volumes.

Both models provide management of the main and multi-zone entertainment via the Integra Remote app for Apple and Android devices, which encompass the selection of online streaming services, internet radio channels, and network audio files. The network connection provides Internet radio and streaming music services include the new addition of TuneIn Radio along with the bevy of services offered in previous generation models such as Spotify, Pandora, Slacker, Rhapsody, SIRIUS XM Internet Radio, AUPEO!, and Last.fm.

They also support the playback of high definition music files in FLAC, DSD, ALAC, HD 24/96 and HD 24/192 formats from HD music download services.

In addition to having the power to steer high-res movie soundtracks at theater-reference volumes, the receiver is loaded with high-end features to optimize two-channel performance. Pre-processing incorporates three 192kHz/24-bit TI Burr-Brown DACs (with one stereo DAC per front channel in Differential DAC mode). Audiophiles wishing to bi-amp their front speakers can find performance increases from the proprietary Digital Processing Crossover Network, which splits the audio signal very precisely into separate high- and low-frequency signals, feeding them to the appropriate speaker drivers. This all but eliminates frequency overlap at the crossover point for a more transparent stereo image.