In 2 Minutes
- Must-haves: Screen, solid mount, HDMI cable (2 m+), external speaker.
- Nice-to-have: Fire TV Stick (Android-free only), blackout curtains, cable tray.
- Avoid: Cheap screens with shine, HDMI under 1 m, no-name mounts without weight specs.
- Budget reality: A solid accessory bundle runs 120–250 € on top of your projector.
You've bought your projector — and now you realize you're missing everything: screen, cables, mount, sound. We'll show you what actually belongs on your accessories list — and where you can save.
The accessory pyramid — what you need and when
Not every accessory is necessary on day one. Here's how we prioritize:
| Level | Accessory | When to buy |
|---|---|---|
| Essentials | HDMI cable, external audio source | Right away with your projector |
| Comfort | Screen, mount, remote control | After your first movie nights |
| Upgrade | Blackout, cable management, streaming stick | Once usage becomes regular |
| Pro | 4K source device, AV receiver, ceiling mount | For a true home theater setup |
Screen: The biggest quality leap
A white wall works at first. But once you mount a proper screen, the image suddenly gets way more vibrant. Here's why: screens are optimized for gain (light amplification).
- Rollable screen (80–120"): From 80 €. Retracts into the ceiling, space-saving.
- Fixed frame screen: Taut tension, black border — maximum image sharpness, from 150 €.
- Motorized screen: Remote-controlled, from 200 €.
Tech tip
Gain values above 1.3 amplify the image, but narrow the viewing angle. For living rooms with multiple seating positions, gain 1.0–1.2 is ideal — even brightness from every seat.
HDMI cable: The underrated weak point
The cheapest cable is often the culprit behind picture drops and color noise. Three things matter:
- Standard: At minimum HDMI 2.0, HDMI 2.1 for 4K.
- Length: Under 3 m is unproblematic. From 5 m onward, get an active cable with built-in signal amplification.
- Certification: Look for the "Premium High Speed" logo — it's not marketing, it's a real test.
Mount: Ceiling, shelf, or tripod?
Your mounting choice determines comfort and image stability.
| Mount type | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling mount | Permanently perfect alignment | Installation and wiring required |
| Shelf / dresser | Zero installation effort | Aesthetics need to work, wobbling possible |
| Floor tripod | Flexible for outdoor and mobile use | Not ideal for permanent setups |
Sound: Why the built-in speaker isn't enough
Compact projectors have 5–10 W speakers. Fine for dialogue clarity, too weak for real movie atmosphere.
- Bluetooth soundbar (from 80 €): Simple, no cables. Check for latency under 100 ms.
- Stereo system via audio out: Best sound quality, if you have one. 3.5 mm jack or Bluetooth.
- 5.1 system: Only if you really want cinema — budget 400 €+ and an AV receiver.
Streaming & source: Do you really need a stick?
Modern smart projectors like PIXORA One and PIXORA Max have Android 11 built-in — Netflix, YouTube, and Prime Video run directly. You only need a Fire TV Stick if your projector doesn't have a smart OS.
What you should not buy
- No-name screens under 50 €: Often glossy, poor tension, visible wrinkles.
- HDMI cables under 5 €: Signal loss, color noise, occasional dropouts.
- Universal mounts without weight specs: Shaky mounting = blurry image.
Bottom line: Your next move
The right order: First a solid HDMI cable and external audio, then a screen, finally a mount. That way you only invest in what you'll actually use. Find discounted accessories and matching bundles in our projector collection.
We've tested all accessories ourselves — if it doesn't work, it's not in the shop.
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