New multi-room A/V system - Ideas?

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  • steve_m
    Automated Home Lurker
    • Jan 2011
    • 6

    New multi-room A/V system - Ideas?

    I could really use some help if anybody is willing. I have to start by saying that I’m not very worldly in the area of A/V, it’s a whole new world for me and I’m doing my best to learn, but it’s not easy starting from almost nothing (most I’ve ever had before it a TV and satellite box in the living room).

    I am refurbishing our home, it’s an big old farmhouse and as we’re a large family (five children), I thought, while I’m ripping the plaster off all the walls, I’d put in a multi room A/V system. Trouble is, I have a very limited budget once I’ve bought the TV’s themselves, so I’m trying to figure out what I can achieve still.

    Basically, what I want ideally is visual and audio media in eleven locations (six bedrooms, guest room, kitchen, living room, play room and cinema room) and further if possible audio media also in the dining room and in the two bathrooms.

    I think I have TV and Satellite mostly figured out, with the exception of the cinema room anyway, my proposal is to use a Labgear TV distribution amplifier (similar to HDU681S but more outputs) with five inputs of two sky+HDboxes, the tv ariel, and FM ariel, a DAB ariel and 12 outputs (so I have one spare). This will only work with Coax, so only standard resolution (no HD), but except for the cinema room that is fine, and will delivery two sky channels, freeview, fm and dab radio to all the rooms, and by adding magic eyes and a global super plus combiner I can even control the sky boxes from each room if I want to. Total cost (excluding cabling) is about £300 plus the tv’s in each room

    But that leaves me still with three main problems to solve

    1) I also want to be able to deliver recorded media to all of the rooms, independently, so mainly music (back-up cd’s or downloaded music) and back-up dvd’s, would also be nice to watch stored home movies and photos. I’d like to be able to control the delivery of this media, in each room, with some kind of remote controller. I’ve considered
    a) Sonos – But for 11 main rooms plus a further 3 zones, it’s going to be very expensive, and still won’t solve visual media, I do like that it gives me access to Napster though, and I don’t know if any of the other solutions can do that, can they?
    b) Apple TV – Seems to have some potential, put one in each room, give each family member an ipod touch, but I apart from 11 apple tv’s and 6 ipod touches, I don’t really know what else I need to make it work, presumably some kind of central device with itunes running (can I link 11 apple tv’s to one itunes) and can I put home movies and back-up dvd’s into itunes?
    c) Other streaming devices like boxee or xbox360 or ps3 – Again, seems to have some potential, with one in each room, though less clear how to control the devices, although seems like they can handle wider variety of media and can use a standard NAS drive at the hub to store everything, but is it a better or worse solution than apple tv? Any thoughts?
    d) A central media server or media PC– Getting out of my league to understand these, so much content on the net, so many conflicting articles about how good or bad they are, and not clear to me what combination of central device and client device I’d need and what costs would be, any support on options here would help, but again, I am looking for a budget solution.
    e) I even thought, what about just a laptop in each room, directly connected to the tv, either with it’s own local storage, or also still having a NAS on the network – But naturally more expensive than b) or c) so probably not best budget option.
    f) what am I missing, or which of the above would be most stable and easy to use

    2) I need to figure out the cinema room – In there I want a projector and screen, and want to be able to watch the sky+HD and the HD recorded media, in HD, and have surround sound, 5.1, so how to integrate this with the rest, but have it in HD? Any ideas?

    3) If I can, I’d like to be able to have a pair of corner speakers in each room, so the sound can either come from the TV, but also can come out of speakers instead, but I am lost how to achieve this (have never used speakers before, only tv). What is the difference between active speakers and passive speakers, how do I get the sound to go from my TV, to the speakers, what do I need in the middle and how much does it cost, or can I directly connect speakers to my TV, if so, what kind? I am not an audiophile, they don’t need to be the worlds most amazing speakers, just basic room speakers to deliver a nice stereo sound, better than comes directly out of the TV itself.

    Help… Please, anybody that has better knowledge than me, I’d appreciate help on any or all of the above, and I going off in wrong directions, am I missing things that would do the job better… Already the above is the result of nearly two weeks of surfing and trying to learn, going round in circles and feeling very out of my depth…. Am I making a mistake separating the tv from the recorded media, is there a better ‘all in one’ solution, on a budget? Hope someone out there might be able to help me…
  • steve_m
    Automated Home Lurker
    • Jan 2011
    • 6

    #2
    extra info

    Specifically my requirements are to have:

    Audio and Video in 11 rooms, and audio only in a further 3 rooms which are linked with the same output as three of the original 11 (so just sub zones), ideally with the sources all being in a central hub (a rack in a cupboard). I want each media point to have independent control of what they watch or listen to, so in fact to be able to do 11 different things at the same time and control what they are doing with a remote, at the media point.

    As an idea of budget, excluding the cabling, projector, speakers and televisions, sky boxes and ariels (so mainly focusing on switches, remote controllers, IR extenders, servers, clients, drives, streamers, amps if needed) I am trying to come in somewhere between £2000 and £3000, the more complete a system, the more integrated and centrally controlled, the more functionality, the more I would spend I guess... Of course, if my expectations are entirely unrealistic, then I need to be told that and told what budget I should be looking at... I do however prefer to compromise on my requirements where possible, to keep within budget

    Comment

    • TimH
      Automated Home Legend
      • Feb 2004
      • 509

      #3
      Originally posted by steve_m View Post
      What is the difference between active speakers and passive speakers,
      Picking-off the easy questions first

      Passive speakers don't have a power supply to them - you plug in speaker cable and turn the amplifier on. These are (perhaps) the more traditional type of speaker.

      Active speakers are powered - most computer-type speakers are active, as are iPod docks, etc. To get sound out you need to turn the speakers on *and* feed them with a "line level" or headphone-type signal.

      Be careful with subwoofers as they can be either type (or sometimes both). Make sure you don't feed speaker-level outputs into the "line-in" input...

      I'll have a think about the rest of it and come back with a more complete answer later
      In the meantime, I don't have experience of the Apple TV solution but if you were to use a PS3 you'd have local control in each room / zone and use the local TV to see what you're doing with audio selection and obviously watch DVDs etc. The PS3 also does allow you to watch the BBC iPlayer directly via the console as well as the ITV and 4od replay services too.

      Just one more thing to think about - what size / type of TVs are you planning for your remote rooms (e.g. bedrooms?). Sky distribution over coax will work but you'll be right at the bottom of the quality scale. It's probably fine for small portable sets but you might be disappointed with the picture on an xx" LCD / plasma.

      HTH,

      Tim.
      My Flickr Photos

      Comment

      • toscal
        Moderator
        • Oct 2005
        • 2061

        #4
        I would go for something like XBMC, Boxee is an offshoot of XBMC.
        Its quite feasible to build an XBMC system for about 300 to 400 pounds maybe less if you use ebay or get a good deal.
        For more info click here
        I have an XBMC connected to a NAS device in the garage. This has all our music, photos and films stored on it. It was a bit of a pain getting all the DVD's ripped and onto the server, but now as its only one or two its not bad.
        XBMC can store DVDs as either complete DVDs or in a variety of video formats such as Divx, Xvid, MKV and others. There is also a variety of plugins from BBC iplayer, TVCatchup and many many more.
        My XBMC is based on an Ubuntu 10.04LTS system, and works very well. My 7 year old daughter can use it with out any prompting.
        For control I use one of these
        Though this one might be better.
        There is also a plugin for the Sonos system for the XBMC.
        The Sonos system can be expanded as a later date. So I would select only a couple of rooms then maybe every so often add another room. That way you spread the costs.
        IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM.
        Renovation Spain Blog

        Comment

        • steve_m
          Automated Home Lurker
          • Jan 2011
          • 6

          #5
          thanks

          Hi Tim,

          Thanks for your help so far, appreciate it..

          Starting with speakers then, as you have... If I want speakers up in the corner of my room, to replace the sound coming directly out of the tv, do I need passive or active speakers (I assume passive as I can't think how to get power to speakers that are up in the corner of the room)... And do i need something between the tv and the speakers, some kind of receiver or amp?

          They don't need to be anything fancy, just better than TV speakers, maybe multimedia PC speakers would do the job, but I can't see how to fit them into the corner of rooms as they seem only to be designed to sit next to a PC but I want to run cable up behind the plasterwork...

          Are there any speakers which plug directly into PS3 or apple tv that you are aware of? Or directly into a TV? Or that could be powered by CAT 5 cable which I could run up to the corner of each room I suppose? Or on my budget do I need to forget having speakers in the rooms because I actually need a receiver in each room to really make it work?

          With the coax delivering the tv, we will be using 26" LCD flatscreen tv's in each room... I have no idea what quality will be like, but I've been told that to distribute HD around the house (to rooms, some of need a length of cable around 50 metres long as we're going up into the loft first), would cost many thousands of pounds... So I want to find a way to get HD into the cinema room (don't know how to do that either though, as it's also 50m of cable from the hub) but probably have to live with standard res in the rest of the rooms...

          hope you can help further Tim, thanks.

          Comment

          • steve_m
            Automated Home Lurker
            • Jan 2011
            • 6

            #6
            xbmc

            Hi Toscal,

            I confess, I know nothing of XBMC - If I should see it as something akin to boxee, does that mean I need one of the described XBMC systems for each room in the house, plus the NAS drive? I assume that would cost more than 4k to set up, or am I getting it wrong?

            Comment

            • toscal
              Moderator
              • Oct 2005
              • 2061

              #7
              You need one XBMC per room, and then one NAS for the whole system.
              As for cost it all depends on the spec of the machines you use.
              My machines spec is 1GB of memory, an AMD 64x2 Dual core 4000+ cpu, dvd rom drive a 30Gb hard drive and a Gigabyte GA-68SM-S2 mother board. I was fortunate to have these bits and bobs just lying around.
              Personally what I would do is possibly look at a worst case scenario as regards to room occupation. If there is 7 of you in the house how many rooms can you occupy at once.
              Also I would think about only having maybe 5 or 6 XBMC that can be accessed from any room. These could be centrally located and then using possibly an iPhone or iTouch or web browser on any other device to control them. That way you could be in the lounge pause a film and then pick it up in your bedroom where you left off. You would need an AV distribution system, and I would recommend something that is based on CAT5 or higher cabling.
              It is also possible via an sql server to have a centrally located database for all connected XBMC boxes if you want.

              The one I have is from Abitana
              IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM.
              Renovation Spain Blog

              Comment

              • rarem
                Automated Home Jr Member
                • Sep 2009
                • 23

                #8
                I think Toscal's suggestion is a good one. Look at how much you will actually need. It might be better to focus on making the main rooms topnotch and speccing the satellite rooms a little less.

                I'd also make this suggestion to use your budget wisely - couldn't you use the TV speakers instead of speccing individual ones for each room. For every room that used only the TV speakers I reckon you save at least £100 (speakers and amps).

                With that £100 saved you can buy an Apple TV for each room. You can install XBMC onto the Apple TV and these can then stream content off of you NAS. The Apple TVs come with remotes that can fully control XBMC, or if you have an iphone or ipod touch you can use them. So your cost per rooms are basically just TV + wiring + Apple TV (£100). This is pretty doable.

                As time goes on add extra speakers if required. If people are mainly watching TV it will be cost effective. If they mainly listen to music, then obviously the audio quality won't be as good and you'll have higher running costs (in keeping the TV on as opposed to an amplifier and speakers only).

                Comment

                • steve_m
                  Automated Home Lurker
                  • Jan 2011
                  • 6

                  #9
                  Hi Rarem,

                  All sounds like solid advice, thanks for that. Quick question then, I like the idea of the simple system you describe, and I understand you putting XBMC on the apple tv to widen up the formats it can cope with and allow use of a NAS drive, but can I install XBMC on the latest generation apple tv's or are you suggesting I buy some of the first generation machines?

                  Comment

                  • rarem
                    Automated Home Jr Member
                    • Sep 2009
                    • 23

                    #10
                    Hi Steve - No, you just need to buy the second generation one, the little black one. It's very cheap, fast and quiet because it has no hard drive.

                    You will need to jailbreak it and install XBMC onto it. If you don't know how to do this there are many tutorials online. Have a read, it's very easy but if you don't think you can manage it, then don't go this route as it will mean that it would be too difficult for you down the line. It is very easy though and you sound more than capable of doing it.

                    Comment

                    • steve_m
                      Automated Home Lurker
                      • Jan 2011
                      • 6

                      #11
                      Hi Rarem,

                      Just out of interest, what are your feelings on the apple tv versus boxee of WD TV Live, I know little about them, but I see them on the net being compared, often favourably to apple tv, mainly I think because they can stream from a NAS without the need to go through the jailbreak process (isn't boxee based on XBMC)... Are these better directions to go from the start, or is there some benefit to apple tv that makes it worth going through the jailbreak and XBMC install process?

                      Comment

                      • rarem
                        Automated Home Jr Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 23

                        #12
                        Hi Steve - Trust me any pain you would have in jailbreaking the ATV would be more than offset be how simple things would be after it. WD make nice hard drives but I really think you'd run into more problems with their unit versus the ATV.

                        The other great benefit of the ATV is that if your family have iphones or ipod touches you can simply stream media directly from them to the ATV.

                        I run an all Mac household. If you do it you won't regret it.

                        Comment

                        • kris2lee
                          Automated Home Jr Member
                          • Mar 2010
                          • 19

                          #13
                          Most important thing is the cabling.

                          So when you do not know what you want then just run 50 mm cable tube into the places where your TV's and other electronics should be and install the cable rope into it. That way you can later throw everything into the tube (just rememeber to install the new rope every time).

                          Also certanly run all the speaker cable you can think of. You can install the speakers later when you find the need but you do not have to take down the plaster again.

                          I really recomend you to look into the HDMI distribution. You can buy HDMI in bulk and terminate it where needed. You need special cable, plugs, special crimp tool and cable tester but it is actually not that expensive as it sounds.

                          I can not find any usable links from my bookmarks but you could search for "field terminated hdmi" for example. Check also German pages (with .de ending). I try to locate some products when I have the time to dive into my paper catalogs.

                          Comment

                          • wywywywy
                            Automated Home Sr Member
                            • Dec 2005
                            • 86

                            #14
                            Originally posted by steve_m View Post
                            a) Sonos – But for 11 main rooms plus a further 3 zones, it’s going to be very expensive, and still won’t solve visual media, I do like that it gives me access to Napster though, and I don’t know if any of the other solutions can do that, can they?
                            If you go for a music solution plus an AV solution, the problem you have is that you will have to switch input to your amps every time you change the source... which is annoying and very likely to confuse guests/wife(s)!

                            By the way if Sonos is too expensive, have a look at SqueezeBox.

                            b) Apple TV – Seems to have some potential, put one in each room, give each family member an ipod touch, but I apart from 11 apple tv’s and 6 ipod touches, I don’t really know what else I need to make it work, presumably some kind of central device with itunes running (can I link 11 apple tv’s to one itunes) and can I put home movies and back-up dvd’s into itunes?
                            Apple TV isn't very good at offline network-shared media, unless you JB it and put XBMC then it is a MAYBE. It is very good for media your purchase through iTunes though - but reading your post I guess you aren't a big fan of that.

                            c) Other streaming devices like boxee or xbox360 or ps3 – Again, seems to have some potential, with one in each room, though less clear how to control the devices, although seems like they can handle wider variety of media and can use a standard NAS drive at the hub to store everything, but is it a better or worse solution than apple tv? Any thoughts?
                            XBox and PS3 are RUBBISH at this task. They do work but so very confusing. The UI is very very sluggish as well (especially the PS3). More expensive too obviously.

                            d) A central media server or media PC– Getting out of my league to understand these, so much content on the net, so many conflicting articles about how good or bad they are, and not clear to me what combination of central device and client device I’d need and what costs would be, any support on options here would help, but again, I am looking for a budget solution.
                            This is what I went for (okay GOING for not WENT for, yet). A number of cheap nettop boxes, the Acer Aspire Revo in particular, that are small and capable of 1080p playback, using Windows 7 with Windows Media Centre. This has the ultimate flexibility in terms of codecs etc. You can also put USB Freeview HD tuners in so users won't ever have to switch input and all can be done with one remote. The downside obviously is that it is a nightmare to configure and MAINTAIN so many - Windows Update, anti-virus, firewall, codec updates, driver updates, general Windows problems, etc...

                            e) I even thought, what about just a laptop in each room, directly connected to the tv, either with it’s own local storage, or also still having a NAS on the network – But naturally more expensive than b) or c) so probably not best budget option.
                            Probably not the prettiest/neatest...

                            f) what am I missing, or which of the above would be most stable and easy to use
                            Just think about the control. How many remote controls, how to switch source, how to switch on/off multiple devices, how to maintain, what the real costs are (don't forget time). There is also other things to consider such as noise, heat, power consumption, how good do they look, cabling, etc.

                            Whichever way, you will need a central media storage such as a NAS or a server.

                            2) I need to figure out the cinema room – In there I want a projector and screen, and want to be able to watch the sky+HD and the HD recorded media, in HD, and have surround sound, 5.1, so how to integrate this with the rest, but have it in HD? Any ideas?
                            Just have its own system that can access the central storage. What's the problem?

                            3) If I can, I’d like to be able to have a pair of corner speakers in each room, so the sound can either come from the TV, but also can come out of speakers instead, but I am lost how to achieve this (have never used speakers before, only tv). What is the difference between active speakers and passive speakers, how do I get the sound to go from my TV, to the speakers, what do I need in the middle and how much does it cost, or can I directly connect speakers to my TV, if so, what kind? I am not an audiophile, they don’t need to be the worlds most amazing speakers, just basic room speakers to deliver a nice stereo sound, better than comes directly out of the TV itself.
                            Active = self powered, i.e. built-in amp. Passive = powered by an external amp. It goes from the source device (e.g. Apple TV), to the amp, then to the speakers. Except the main rooms, you probably don't want to buy normal cinema amps, unless you are really wealthy. If you are to buy cheap stereo amps, I recommend the Class-T amps (lots of them on eBay from China, but build-quality varies), in particular the ones made by Muse, as that are EXTREMELY cheap yet the sound is unbelievably good. It will probably beat amps that cost many many times more. Seriously, look up some reviews. Make sure you have speakers with high efficiency though as these amps are quite low-powered.

                            Speaking of speakers, you might want to consider in-wall or in-ceiling speakers for some of the "less important" rooms, because normal speakers stand out too much and take too much space. You can get reasonable ones for not much money.

                            Hope it helps!

                            Comment

                            • DavidA
                              Automated Home Lurker
                              • Mar 2011
                              • 1

                              #15
                              I can help a little, although I'm considering the same issue on a smaller scale. About to move into a new house and want TV in several rooms.

                              I've used XBMC on Xbox1, PC and AppleTV2. I've also got a WD box and tried Boxee.

                              XBMC is great. So many features and options, but it remains wife-friendly with the right remote. The Xbox1 build is starting to get a bit dated, the fan is a little noisy and it doesn't support full HD. The PC version is probably good with the right PC; good ones listed earlier in this thread. AppleTV2 is currently a little sluggish, but the box is cheap, tiny and silent; I hope the software improves; I'd think it would be more usable in 6 months time. Also on the horizon is dedicated XBMC hardware (XBMC on a chip), but I don't know when that's due. WD box is okay, but the interface isn't great and options are more limited. Didn't like the interface of Boxee.

                              My current plan is to put a nice XBMC PC box in three rooms in the house. HDMI connections into the TV. Cat5 cabling to a NAS or two under the stairs.

                              I'd guess you should plan for £250 per XBMC PC, £500 for a good NAS, £300 for 8TB of storage.

                              Hope that helps.

                              Comment

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