Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Integration


In this blog I am going to talk about integration of the theater with the rest
of the house. It was decided early on in the construction process of the home
that I wanted to put all the components for the house in a central location and
the six foot rack in the theater room was the ideal location. In this rack I
will house the 2 satellite dishes, PS3, whole house audio amps, Home Theater
Receiver, Network Switch, Router, Power Management , Remote Control Processor,
Media Server, and Lighting controls. The idea of this centralized plan is to
minimize the amount of clutter that you get when you have a smaller
entertainment center in your living room and bedrooms, because all the
cable/satellite boxes, DVD players and games consoles are located away from the
area. Another advantage is the fact that you can play your game consoles from
anywhere in the house or you only need one DVD player rather than one per room.
This is great because when my son is playing the PS3 in the living room and I
don't want to watch it, I can tell him to go play it in the bed room. Or, if I
want to play the PS3 and he wants to watch sponge bob I can direct the video
sources to either TV I want with the push of a button.


With this sort of installation control is key. you must have a rock solid
control system in place. A simple repeater or as nice as they may look a harmony
remote control you pick up at best buy will not do the trick. you must have a
professional remote control system with a processor. Without it you will not be
happy and probably will not be able to use this type of setup at all. I elected
to use the RTI (www.rticorp.com) line or
control solutions. RTi has several models to choose from but for now I am using
the RP6 Processor, T2C and T2Cs Touch screen universal remote controls and also
for the time being I have one RK4 in wall controller. The house was wired to
have more in wall controllers but until I finish the whole house audio system
the one I have is more than enough. I will discuss the whole house in more
detail when I install it hopefully later this summer.


In this picture above left you see the rack I installed in the theater room.
I'm sure you are thinking wow that's pretty sloppy. But remember the title of
this blog. Its a work in progress. When I finish it will look nice and neat. In
the picture above right. Is my Son Dawson and the TV in the living room which is
downstairs. I supply the video signal to this TV via 2 CAT6  Shielded
Ethernet cables that are ran in the walls I also use a
Key Digital KD-HDMIWPTX and a
KD-HDMIWPRX these devices are digital cable extenders they allow me to extend my
HDMI cable to well over 100' they are costly but in this type of setup they are
necessary if you want to transmit full 1080P signals to your TV. A quick not
about these extenders, you must use Sheilded cables or they will not work
properly. I learned this the hard way. I initally installed them with regular
CatV cables and everytime a light switch was turned on or off the TV would lose
signal momentarily.


 







To
the left is my remote control processor. This device received commands
from my universal remote controls and in wall controllers throughout the
house and and sends either IR or RS323 commands to the corresponding
components on the rack. This is a nifty little device I can set up
programs or macros that allow me to virtually setup and control any
component with the push of a simple button. For example on my remote
control screen is a logo for various channels such as Nickelodeon and
and Disney. If my son wants to watch Disney he just touches the logo and
the channel automatically changes to the correct channel he does not
have to memorize the channel lineup only the station logo. Turn out that
this works out well for adults as well.


To the right is my T2C, This is a great remote control. it has a LCD
touch screen that can be custom programmed to do virtually anything you
like. Also RTI includes literally thousands of images and logos that you
can choose to customize the screen. You can also create your own unique
screens if you like. One draw back is only RTI dealers can have access
to the programming software so you will likely have to pay a dealer to
do this for you. As you can see the remote sits in a cradle that charges
the battery so the remote never runs out of juice which is a plus in my
book. Once I programmed the remote it took my 6 year old son about 10
minutes to understand how to use it. He can now watch TV on either of 2
satellites, Play the PS3 and control the lights in the house all from
the couch or bed depending on which room he is in at the the time.


Now, to the lower left is the RK4 in wall controller. I don't really
use this too much right now. I really bought it to control the whole
house audio and the lights, but since I have not completed the whole
house audio yet it kind of just hangs there and looks cool. I also
wanted it for demo purposes so I could invite clients into my home and
show them what these devices are like in a real world setting, not in
some showroom.




No comments:

Post a Comment