see also VIVIDSTORM 150″ Daylight Fresnel ambient light rejecting fixed-frame projection screen

150" Diagonal ALR Ultra Short Throw Projector Screens

150″ Screen Viewing Distance: The recommended viewing distance range from screen surface to eyes while seated for a 150-inch diagonal 16:9 aspect ratio projection screen is from 15 feet (180 inches) to 22.5 feet (270 inches), from most immersive to least immersive.

150″ Image Width and Height: The rectangular dimensions for an exactly 150-inch diagonal 16:9 aspect ratio projected image onto a perfectly-flat, vertical wall are about 130.8 inches wide by 73.5 inches high. That is about 15% larger than the next smaller size 140 inch screen.

Phoenix Projectors AV and SCREENPRO offer tensioned wall-mount, fixed-frame 150″ diagonal ALR (Ambient Light Rejecting) projection screens which must be properly assembled, aligned with UST projector image, and permanently hung from the wall. Either of these HUGE Cinematic ALR screens will produce contrast levels far superior to standard matte white screens when used together with an ultra short throw projector, even more so inside a light-controlled or darkened room.

150" Cinematic Wall-Mounted, Fixed-Frame UST ALR Projection Screens

The Phoenix Projectors AV 150-FF-UST 150″ diagonal wall-mount fixed-frame ALR projection screen [buy at Amazon] utilizes PET Crystal (CBSP) screen material which rejects 95% of overhead/ceiling ambient light, features a 0.8 peak gain, and has a 160° wide viewing angle.

Featuring a narrow 7mm (0.27″) black bezel, the SCREENPRO 150″ diagonal wall-mount fixed-frame ALR projection screen [buy at Amazon] uses T-Prism screen material [T-Prism fabric VS PET fabric YouTube video] which rejects 93% of overhead/ceiling ambient light, features a 0.85 gain, and has a 178° wide viewing angle. Dimensions after assembly are 131.3″ wide, 74.1″ high, and about an inch thick. The optional LED backlight kit shown in video below is NOT INCLUDED! see also [YouTube installation video] and installation instructions PDF link

This page was last updated on September 30, 2024.