• Products
    • Isadora
    • Get It
    • ADD-ONS
    • IzzyCast
    • Get It
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Werkstatt
  • Newsletter
  • Impressum
  • Dsgvo
  • Press
  • Isadora
  • Get It
  • ADD-ONS
  • IzzyCast
  • Get It
  • Press
  • Dsgvo
  • Impressum

Navigation

    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Popular
    • Tags

    Projector placement for big scrim projections

    How To... ?
    7
    10
    1682
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • GertjanB
      GertjanB Beta Platinum last edited by

      Hi all,

      I'm breaking my head over the placement of the projector for a big scrim projection (10m wide 5 or 6m high). On a tight budget.

      I don't want any "left over projection going trough the screen" to fall on the back wall that is 5m behind the scrim. 

      If I calculate this I have to put the projector high up and very steep down so I lose a lot of the projection area. (I won't be having this hight every time and we don't have a budget to have enough ansi lumens I think)

      An other option is to put it closer but then I have a big trapezoid. (0.8 lens in example)

      When I try with two projectors I see the same problems. (a bit less) 

      What am I missing?

      www.gertjanbiasino.be

      mark_m dbini bonemap 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • mark_m
        mark_m @GertjanB last edited by

        @gertjanb said:

        What am I missing?

        Covering the back wall in Vantablack.

        But seriously I don't think you're missing anything: the short distance - 5m - between scrim and back wall plus the width of the projection equals a difficult situation.

        If the back wall is black (as in your diagrams) then covering that wall with black serge or something similarly unreflective will reduce the visibility of any spill. 

        Yes, using more projectors will help but the blending at that kind of an angle is going to be difficult.

        Can you project on to the scrim from the sides, so that the overspill of projected light goes into the wings of the theatre?

        Sorry, not that helpful

        Mark (not that Mark).

        Intel NUC8i7HVK Hades Canyon VR Gaming NUC, i7-8809G w/ Radeon RX Vega M GH 4GB Graphics, 32GB RAM, 2 x NVMe SSD
        Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XD. Intel Core i7-11800H, NVidia RTX3070, 32GB RAM 2 x NVMe SSD
        PC Specialist Desktop: i9-14900K, RTX4070Ti, 64GB RAM, Win11Pro
        www.natalieinsideout.com

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • kdobbe
          kdobbe last edited by kdobbe

          If you have access to an ultra wide lens… You should be able to do this via rear projection. My Ultra Wide lens creates approximately a 2 to 1 ratio of width.  So a 5 m distance will give a 10 m width… I am doing a project right now with very similar dimensions.  Although, I have a front and rear projection screen, so perhaps the scrim might be problematic.

          Mac Studio M2-Ultra, MacBook Pro M1 Ultra. OSX-14.4.1

          dbini 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dbini
            dbini @kdobbe last edited by

            @kdobbe

            which projector are you using to get an image 10m wide? most ultra-wide (mirror-based) systems have a throw ratio of about 0.2:1, but only go around 4m wide before they lose focus. i have a couple of old Optoma short throw projectors that have fixed lens at 0.5:1 but they are only 3500 lumens, so only suitable for projection up to around 6m wide in a very dark space.

            John Collingswood
            taikabox.com
            2019 MBPT 2.6GHZ i7 OSX15.3.2 16GB
            plus an old iMac and assorted Mac Minis for installations

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • dbini
              dbini @GertjanB last edited by

              @gertjanb

              i would go for the widest lens possible and shoot the image from the grid straight at the scrim. if you try to go at a steep angle, you may have trouble focusing the image as the bottom of the scrim is nearly 5m further from the projector than the top of the scrim.
              Using a 0.5:1 lens, or wider, will mean that your image on the back wall is going to be huge, and therefore less intense. If possible, rig some black molton curtains across the back wall - the wavy wibblyness will distort and absorb at least some of what's left of the image.

              Also - a dense scrim like sharkstooth gauze will absorb more of the image.

              John Collingswood
              taikabox.com
              2019 MBPT 2.6GHZ i7 OSX15.3.2 16GB
              plus an old iMac and assorted Mac Minis for installations

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • GertjanB
                GertjanB Beta Platinum last edited by

                I was thinking about a ultra short throw but didn't know the focus limitations.

                I'm now thinking an a completely other direction. I will double the gauze above 2m50 this reduces the brightness of the light falling trough a lot.
                This way the light under 2m50 can fall on the floor and the light above can fall on the back wall where we will use molton as suggested above (or if somebody has some spare Vantablack laying around :) )

                Let hope this works.

                www.gertjanbiasino.be

                Woland dbini 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Woland
                  Woland Tech Staff @GertjanB last edited by

                  @gertjanb said:

                  if somebody has some spare Vantablack laying around

                   There's this non-toxic alternative to Vantablack, but it's still expensive: https://culturehustle.com/collections/black?gclid=CjwKCAiAjPyfBhBMEiwAB2CCInIilPTnBfRjAXwar33ch72_1J42loCScRRC8VLEKtd7cyObs6iiHRoCeXwQAvD_BwE

                  TroikaTronix Technical Support
                  New Support Ticket: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/tickets/new
                  Support Policy: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/solutions/articles/13000064762
                  Add-Ons: https://troikatronix.com/add-ons/ & https://troikatronix.com/add-ons/?u=woland
                  Professional Services: https://support.troikatronix.com/support/solutions/articles/13000109444

                  | Isadora Version: all of them | Mac Pro (Late 2013), macOS 10.14.6, 3.5GHz 6-core, 1TB SSD, 64GB RAM, Dual AMD FirePro D700s |

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • bonemap
                    bonemap Izzy Guru @GertjanB last edited by

                    @gertjanb

                    Hi, not sure I can add anything else that is useful but, I have been working with a team designing a similar set for a show later in the year. All your concerns were reflected in the work we are doing. In this case there is a second scrim down stage that is proposed to have circular portals cut through it in three different places and front projection from the auditorium. Leaving that aside the upstage scrim is a full black sharktooth gauze. After looking at a few options we have decided to back project with the addition of a cyclorama rigged very close to the black guaze. This takes care of any bleed or shine through the scrim, and hides the cyc.  I will use 3x 8000k projectors with short throw lenses flown from the back wall at about 4mtr to the cyc/scrim. This should give us a full width projection across the required 12 mtr. Would love to have a full width back projection screen but the cyc is going to be a bit of a compromise. 

                    Best wishes,

                    Russell

                    http://bonemap.com | Australia
                    Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                    MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
                    Mac Studio 2023 M2 Ultra 128GB | OSX 15.3 Sequoia
                    A range of deployable older Macs

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dbini
                      dbini @GertjanB last edited by

                      @gertjanb

                      if you do this, the top half of the image will look brighter than the lower half - its better to double the scrim all the way to the floor.

                      John Collingswood
                      taikabox.com
                      2019 MBPT 2.6GHZ i7 OSX15.3.2 16GB
                      plus an old iMac and assorted Mac Minis for installations

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • G
                        Gaspar last edited by

                        Hi Gertjan,

                        I don't know if you have the chance to choose whatever projector you want. I own a Fuji FP-Z5000 (discontinued now), and I've used the Z8000 as well, and there is a Z6000 (I think it is the newest).

                        The fixed lens is a 0.35-0.37:1, it has a very good lens shift, and a surprisingly even light for being that short-throw. I typically use it to fill a 8 x 5.5 m, screen. There are no focus issues. On the Z5000 it is important to be orthogonal to the screen in order to keep uniform focus. The newer ones have an iterative 2 step focus that accounts for that.

                        This would allow you to go for rear projection, and the flexibility provided by the strong lens shift can ease your placement.

                        The projector is not easy to find. So in case of interest I would contact directly with Fuji-Europe in Germany (that's what I did) and they referred me to their Spanish headquarters.

                        Good luck

                        Windows 10 64bit version 2004, i7 9700, M.2 SSD for system and SSD 2xRaid for data, 32Gb Ram, nVidia RTX 2070 (mobile) | located in Majorca / Spain

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • First post
                          Last post