In 2 Minutes
- Distance: Depends on throw ratio. For 100 inches, standard projectors need roughly 2.5 m — short-throws pull it off from under 1 m.
- Height: Projector at eye level with screen center = no keystone correction needed.
- Keystone: Digital workaround that costs image sharpness. Always align physically when possible.
- Placement: Table = flexible, shelf = stable, ceiling = cleanest solution. Decide based on your setup.
Your projector's connected, the image is crooked, and keystone correction is making it blurry. Placement determines whether your image stays sharp and rectangular — or turns into a wobbly trapezoid mess. In 6 minutes, you'll know exactly where your projector belongs.
Getting the distance to your screen right
Every projector has a throw ratio — the relationship between projection distance and image width. Example: throw ratio 1.2 means for 2 m image width you need 2.4 m distance. The lower the ratio, the closer the projector can sit.
| Room Depth | Ideal Screen Size | Projector Type |
|---|---|---|
| Small (3–4 m) | 80–100 inches | Standard or short-throw |
| Medium (4–6 m) | 100–140 inches | Standard-throw |
| Large (over 6 m) | 150 inches+ | Standard or long-throw |
| Mini (under 3 m) | 100 inches+ | Short-/ultra-short-throw |
Check your model's datasheet or calculate before setup: image width × throw ratio = required distance.
Height and angle: Avoiding trapezoid distortion
Ideally, your projector sits or hangs at eye level with the screen center. This way light hits the screen perpendicularly — no trapezoid effect. Any deviation (above, below, sideways) forces you to use keystone correction — and that costs image quality.
Keystone explained honestly
Keystone correction stretches the image digitally so an angled trapezoid projection looks rectangular again. Technically speaking: pixels get shifted, some get compressed. Result: edges stay sharp, the center gets slightly softer. With heavy correction (over 15°) you'll notice it. Rule of thumb: align physically, use keystone only for final touches.
Table, shelf, or ceiling? Decision guide
| Placement | Pro | Con |
|---|---|---|
| Table / Sideboard | Flexible, no drilling | Needs adjustment every time |
| Shelf / Wall bracket | Stable position, easy access | One wrong hole = crooked image |
| Ceiling (fixed mount) | Cleanest solution, always perfect | Drilling, cable routing, mounting bracket required |
| Floor stand | No drilling, mobile | In the way, can tip over |
If you watch regularly: ceiling or shelf. If you want flexibility: table or floor stand. For ceiling mounting details, check out the step-by-step guide.
Sideways alignment: Lens shift or center
Your projector should stand centered on the screen — aligned horizontally. If that's not possible (your couch is in the way, for example), two features can help:
- Lens shift: Moves the lens physically, stays optically lossless. Only on pricier models.
- Horizontal keystone: Digital correction sideways, again with sharpness loss.
Planning cable lengths realistically
With a ceiling mount, you'll quickly need 5–10 m of HDMI cable — depending on room geometry. Longer than 10 m: passive HDMI loses signal. Solutions: active HDMI cable with integrated signal booster or HDMI-over-fiber. Our cables & adapters cover all standard lengths.
Bottom line: Your next move
Placement is your home theater's foundation. Spend 20 minutes measuring distance, height, and angle properly — it'll save you hours of keystone fiddling later. The PIXORA One with its 180° projection is especially forgiving for angled setups. Find more models in our projector collection.
We've measured three living rooms ourselves — and each had a different ideal position. From real experience: plan physically, correct digitally only minimally.
Fits the topic
PIXORA One
HD native · 180° · Android 11 · from €99.99
Keep reading from this cluster
- →Set up a home theater: 5 tips
- →Darkening your home theater: methods
- →Beginner mistakes & how to avoid them
- →Home theater in your living room
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