All About Home Theater Electronics
Watching movies has been referred to as 'escapism' - like it's a bad thing - but in reality, escapism is defined as a mental diversion. Movies allow us to take our minds away from the stress of the everyday world, making us feel younger and think positive.
Take a good look at your home and assess where would be the best place to install your home theater electronics. Don't have it installed where it is in direct contact with the sun's rays. Even if you are using a flat screen TV, as long as you set up the TV horizontally across a window, you may need special curtains to prevent the glare from streaming in.
The first thing you have to get for your home theater electronics system is a large flat screen TV, so you can be ensured of a crisp-looking picture. They're relatively inexpensive compared to what they were a few years ago.
After you've set up the flat screen TV, your next consideration would be home theater speakers - how many? Allow ample space for your home theater, and be mindful of the size of the room.
Always go with surround sound, and go for something like six speakers and a sub woofer to best approximate theater-quality sound. Remember that speakers have a power rating that lets you know what kind of power you'll get.
Don't just get any DVD player for your home theater electronics system - it would be best if you jump on the Blu-Ray bandwagon if you haven't yet. You'll want to make sure you get the best for your home system so look for progressive scan capabilities.
This only means that the system as a different way of reading the image. Pixels are read in a certain manner. Not all DVD players have that capability. What's the bottom line? A better-looking image - that's what it means.
The most affordable, yet most important part of your home electronics system would be the surge protector, so don't leave that out of your shopping list. This prevents every other component from going KABLAMMO due to some electronic glitch. You need to make sure you protect your investment by using a surge protector for those "just in case" moments.