Lounge length to TV size non chav ratio
Lounge length to TV size non chav ratio
Author
Discussion

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
I realise that the posh people wouldn’t have a big TV at all. We have a 10meter long lounge and we have a 60inch TV and then a 102 inch projector screen for films (drops out of slit in ceiling)

The TV is getting old and has a small screen bright spot (burn) so will need to replace and big TVs have dropped in price.

I have a big wall it can go on, is there a “too big” size? I have driven past some houses and seen a monster tv through the window an it can look a bit OTT. Any thoughts?

Big OLED or similar something. Plan to go decent brand

markiii

4,212 posts

218 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Similar size lounge 75" is fine, will get an 85" when it dies

John D.

20,305 posts

233 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Sitting 10m from the TV is next level.

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
John D. said:
Sitting 10m from the TV is next level.
We sit about 7m as the sofa isn’t against the wall.

_Rodders_

1,332 posts

43 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
I'd say 85in if you're being sensible but I am a bit of a chav and best value at the moment seems to be 100in in terms of cost per square in.

There's also a bit of future proofing as the trend still seems to be upwards.

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Thanks all. Will look at some options.

paralla

5,183 posts

159 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
If you sit 10m from the TV I’d suggest re-arranging your furniture so you sit closer. The room size is less relevant than how far you sit from the screen.

https://petertyson.co.uk/blog/how-to-measure-your-...

Jo-say8k

236 posts

40 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
If your television is the same size as the projector screen then you'll never use the projector?

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
paralla said:
If you sit 10m from the TV I d suggest re-arranging your furniture so you sit closer. The room size is less relevant than how far you sit from the screen.

https://petertyson.co.uk/blog/how-to-measure-your-...
I don’t sit 10m from the screen. The room is 10m long and I don’t want the screen to over dominate it. The 102inch projector screen would be over the top for watching the news.

We sit 6-7 m from the screen

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Jo-say8k said:
If your television is the same size as the projector screen then you'll never use the projector?
Agreed, another reason why I don’t want to go too big.

rodericb

8,539 posts

150 months

Sunday 29th March
quotequote all
Caddyshack said:
paralla said:
If you sit 10m from the TV I d suggest re-arranging your furniture so you sit closer. The room size is less relevant than how far you sit from the screen.

https://petertyson.co.uk/blog/how-to-measure-your-...
I don t sit 10m from the screen. The room is 10m long and I don t want the screen to over dominate it. The 102inch projector screen would be over the top for watching the news.

We sit 6-7 m from the screen
General telly watching screen to distance ratio is generally 2.5:1. Movies is 2:1. Where the screen sits vertically is also important. If you're seven metres from a sixty inch screen that's a fair old distance - you could move your seating a couple of metres closer and it might open up some useful space behind. The thing is that content is produced with certain screening distances and the prevailing resolution so you could be missing detail if you're overly far away from the screen.

Chav territory is probably towards the 1.5:1, and then having the screen slung up the wall above a fireplace. You've got a fair bit of a buffer before you get there, even if you're watching the news on a projector screen..

Badda

3,639 posts

106 months

Sunday 29th March
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If you walk into the room and the TV is the dominant feature, you’re a chav.

Jo-say8k

236 posts

40 months

Sunday 29th March
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Therefore it should be lesser than the glazing

Blib

47,237 posts

221 months

Sunday 29th March
quotequote all
Make sure you place the TV as high up on the wall as possible.

It will completely compromise the image, along with your viewing pleasure. But, that's what everyone who is anyone does nowadays.

yes

Easternlight

3,835 posts

168 months

Sunday 29th March
quotequote all
I'd have to knock through two walls to get a 10m run in my bungalow!

Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Sunday 29th March
quotequote all
Blib said:
Make sure you place the TV as high up on the wall as possible.

It will completely compromise the image, along with your viewing pleasure. But, that's what everyone who is anyone does nowadays.

yes
How about on the ceiling? I would have to take the mirror down but that doesn’t really get much use after 25 yrs of marriage. (lol)

The Gauge

6,454 posts

37 months

Monday 30th March
quotequote all
I don't know if the following image is correct, but as far as appreciating 4K image is concerned...





And there is this one..


Caddyshack

Original Poster:

14,048 posts

230 months

Monday 30th March
quotequote all
Interesting…seems I might need a bigger TV!

Digger

16,166 posts

215 months

Monday 30th March
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Caddyshack said:
Interesting seems I might need a bigger TV!
We were all thinking it biggrin

Go full chav . . . Minimum 85” I d suggest . . .

Sporky

10,579 posts

88 months

Monday 30th March
quotequote all
I'd start st what I do for work (commercial AV).

Viewing distance in millimetres divided by 75 is diagonal in inches.

This equates to screen height being 1/6th the viewing distance.