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DreamScreen ULTRAWEAVE V6 TEXTILESHIELD PRO SCREEN FABRIC 2X3M CUTOUT FIT-ALL SYSTEM

SKU: UW_V6_PRO_TS_118x78
9 999,- inkl. mva
Antall:

Kun 6 på lager

20
250 × 30 × 30 cm

Kun 6 på lager

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Ny versjon med nytt beskyttelsessystem; TextileShield. Denne versjonen har fullskala TextileShield PRO, men finnes også i en rimeligere standardutgave. Denne versjonen leveres med hele 10 års flekkgaranti. Les mer om TextileShield her: https://dreamscreen.no/pages/textileshield-information.

 

Kort fortalt har vi funnet en måte som utnytter UltraWeavens patenterte oppbygning til å skape en revolusjonerende beskyttelse mot alt fra kaffe, vin til smør, olje og alt annet som ved et uhell måtte havne på lerretsduken. I motsetning til vanlige lerretsduker som har en coating som kan ødelegges om du prøver å fjerne flekker, vil denne TextileShield beskyttede lerretsduken ikke endre utseende om du er uheldig og får en flekk som du må “rubbe” bort.

Det som gjør denne beskyttelsen så unik er det faktum at den ikke reduserer noen av verken bilde- eller lydmessige parametre fra V6en. Gain, D65 tracking og lydtransparens forholder seg på eksakt samme nivåer selv om altså duken avviser alt av både vann, olje og “solide” flekker!

Standardversjonen har samme beskyttelsessystem, men er kun påført på førstelaget, mens PRO-versjonen har behandlingen påført på samtlige lag. Følgelig leveres standardversjonen uten den samme 10-års flekkgarantien men har allikevel et svært fungerende og kraftig flekkavvisningssystem. Av produksjonstekniske årsaker leveres PRO-versjonen med et semi-limt førstelag (dvs. at laget sitter litt løsere på enn normalt) som følge av fullbehandlingen, men dette har ingen betydning for verken bilde- eller lydkvalitet etter installasjon / oppstrekning.

Informasjon fra produsent:

The characteristics and layout of the PRO XXL is exactly the same as the current V6, but the PRO version is made out fire retardant (NFPA 701 US standard) which is often a requirement for pro installations (studios, screening rooms etc.).

In addition to the max sized roll of 118″x295″ / 3x8m (XXL), 78″x118″ / 3x2m cutouts are available.

PS! PRICE INCLUDES UNIVERSAL GRIP RAILS THAT FITS OUR V6 FRAMES (WITHOUT GLUE), DIY WOODEN FRAMES AS WELL AS RETROFITTING YOUR EXISTING ALUMINUM FRAME, PLEASE FIND VIDEO INSTALLATION GUIDES FOR ALL OPTIONS BELOW.
Now also includes our new “UltraTucker” in-house designed tucking tool that enables a professional and stabile installation quicker than ever!

The characteristics and layout of the PRO XXL is exactly the same as the current V6, but the PRO version is made out fire retardant (NFPA 701 US standard) which is often a requirement for pro installations (studios, screening rooms etc.).

In addition to the max sized roll of 118″x295″ (XXL), 78″x118″ cutouts are available of the PRO version.

NOW PATENTED! The unique technique used to produce the UltraWeave V5 and V6 has now been approved by the US Patent and Trademark office. This allows us to pour even more resources into this great line of products!

PVC vs V6
This is an actual side-by-side comparison of a reference grade non-AT PVC-based projection screen. The unique patented buildup of the V6 UltraWeave emulates the randomised surface coating and consequently the sharpness of a regular (non-transparent) screen while maintaining industry leading acoustical transparency (average loss <1,5dB).


The above image compares the V6 to a random custom designed single reflective layered knitted fabric, which is what we used for our 3. generation fabrics back in 2009 as well. However, in order to increase sharpness, from our 5. generation onwards, we added the now patented ultra fine front randomly woven layer, and rather used the knitted fabrics as the second reflective and third black backing layer, combining the sharpness and density of the weave AND the acoustical transparency of the knit. Although knitted fabrics are quite good in both structural density and acoustical transparency, the fact remains that light blooming / spill via the knitted “fluffy” cavities reduce sharpness quite significantly. 
Edges appear more blurred and details simply “wash out”. Maximum reflected sharpness will become increasingly important moving forward as 4K, 8K and even higher resolutions become available. In other words, the patented design of the V6 offers The Best of Two Worlds – and consequently maximum sharpness and reference acoustical transparency.

 

Quick guide to show you how to very easily install the UltraWeave onto one of our V6 UltraFrames.

Fabric Mate Tucker Tool

TIP! We highly recommend this professional “Rocker” tool from Fabricmate.com for quick and precise installation of the fabric into the grip rails >>

This quick guide shows you how to make a DIY wooden framed screen using the available grip rails

This video displays how to recycle your existing aluframe using the grip rails
Updated color accuracy and gain measures has now been made, whereas the V6 reflects within a margin of less than 2% vs. the 6500K Industry Standard and has a gain of 0.81. In short, compared to the V5, the V6 features;

  • 50% larger size, now up to 118″ height and 295″ length
  • 30% finer front texture, providing further increased sharpness, an even more “solid” appearance with almost no visible structure even from directly up front as well as no possible moiré on current and future resolutions such as 8K and beyond
  • Gain from 0.8 to 0.81
  • 0.4dB improved max transparency @ 20kHz and an average AT of 1.5dB vs. 1.6dB on the V5. See measurements and methodology below
  • 6500K tuned (within a margin of 2% vs. the Industry Standard)
  • NFPA 701 fire retardancy

The ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V6 is our 6. generation acoustic transparent (AT) fabric. Throughout the last 10 years we have tested, prototyped, produced and sold a number of technical solutions.

In our opinion, the best possible screen is the one that does not even make its appearance; you simply see what is projected upon it, nothing less, nothing more. By combining a high-gain (0.81@D65*), yet speckle-free and full viewing-angled reflection with high resolution, well contrasted and color neutral performance we really feel the V6 is closer than ever to obtaining that objective. When adding industry-leading acoustical transparency to that equation, the patent pending technology utilized in the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V6 is really a potential groundbreaking discovery that may very well be able to alter how we regard AT screens in terms of image quality even directly compared to regularly non-AT screens which has really been the Achilles´ heel of most AT screens thus far.

Using an AT screen in your cinema provides a number of advantages. First; the placement of speakers behind the fabric increases overall authenticity as the sound is actually emitting from where the action takes place. Also, an AT-screen provides a far cleaner surface, increasing the focus on the projected movie rather than the speaker-system. If you install the speakers in a (recommended) baffled setup, you will also increase the sound-level by several dB´s (which is a whole lot as the Decibel-scale is logarithmic). As the size of the screen increases, the acoustical disadvantage of placing a huge, reflective surface in the front increases as well. By other words; the larger TV or regular non-AT projection-screen you plan to install, the more trouble you´re likely to get in regards to controlling the sound-waves bouncing back and forth in your room. Last, but not least, an AT screen allows you to utilize the entire width of your room, maximizing the screen-size to its fullest extent!

The ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V6 has a matte white surface, bouncing off light from the fabric in an uniform manner. This means that the fabric is reflecting light in a full 160 degree angle, allowing the audience to be seated anywhere in the room without experiencing off-axis light-reduction which is the case for most positive-gain -and filtered screens. Also, this type of screen-material is not maintaining the polarization of incoming light, which – if maintained – may cause visible artifacts when using active 3D-glasses.

Optimally, a dark “batcave” will provide you with the best image-quality from the UltraWeave V6, although immediate reflections surrounding the screen, both in ceiling, walls and floors are the most important to make certain is dark (preferably black) and as non-reflective in nature as possible.

*Please find benchmark tests using the Stewart Studiotek 100 non-AT matte white screen as the reference vs. a regular AT weaved screen, marketed and priced in the upper high-end-segment and the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 at the bottom of this page. THE V6 HAS NOW BEEN MEASURED IN AT 0.81 GAIN.

The UltraWeave V6 is sold in rolls of 79″ x 177″ of fabric (allowing up to a 188″ diagonal / 430cm width on a 2.35:1 / CineScope formatted screen or 160″ diagonal on 16:9) and optionable grip rails that is made to fit our V5 frames. However, the grip rails are easily adoptable also for DIY-projects where the rails are glued to a DIY wood-stud-frame or an existing, recycled, aluminum frame.

Our development-process has been long, challenging, yet in the end quite successful – in short;

2005 – V1: Dual layer vinyl weave (white) + knitted (grey). Glued. Single reflecting layer.

2007 – V2: Dual layer knitted fabric, grey + white. Glued. Single reflecting layer.

2009 – V3: Single layer knitted fabric grey only. Single reflecting layer.

2011 – V4: Single to three-layered separate layers fabric / synthetic weave. Tensioned, not glued. Single reflecting front layer.

2014 – V5: Three layered weave + knit. Glued. Multiple reflected layers. PATENTED.

2016 – V6: Three layered weave + knit. Glued. Multiple reflected layers. 30% finer front texture and 25% larger size compared to V5. Gain 0.81, from 0.8 on V5. PATENTED.

The science

Our sixth generation AT fabric is a result of the research and development gathered in V1 through V5, where for our two latest generations we found that utilizing several layers that actually reflects in combination rather than one front layer reflecting the image alone would potentially increase both image quality and sound transparency.

Figure depicts how the principle of regular single reflective layer vs. the multiple reflective layers works (International Patent # WO2014175747). We are currently utilizing two reflective layers, but in future revisions we might use even more layers to increase density, gain and acoustical transparency even further.

Utilizing several reflective layers, we have been able to combine a very fine, weaved front surface with two additional knitted layers, one white mid-layer, as well as a black backing layer.

The secret to our excellent image-quality and reference-level AT is the use of several layers of different types of fabric that reflect in combination

The thin, weaved front-layer would not have worked alone, simply because the reflection of light would be too low. However, in combination with a backing-layer that assists on the reflection, the total amount of light-reflection is higher than ever before.

The “magic” that makes this technique unique is the fact that upon reflection, our eye only sees the structure from the front-fabric, even from right in front of the screen, although the layer behind is reflecting light as well. The front-layer works as a filter of kinds, providing the highest density, resolution and sharpness possible.


However, when we project light upon the surface, only the first layer of the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave  (left) reflects visible structure, providing far higher density and thus increased reflected sharpness and resolution compared to the regularly woven AT screen to the right. Please note that the seemingly apparent “speckle” from the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave is caused by oversaturating contrast and sharpness in Photoshop in order to display the structure more clearly. In actuality the fabric has a superb matte surface / reflection without any speckle / reflective artifacts. 

The second layer is also an essential part of the buildup. As the first layer provides the structural sharpness required for the image to be as seamless as it is, the second layer mainly needs to assist on light-reflection. As such, we are able to use a far rougher type of fabric that is knitted instead of weaved. A knitted fabric, often used in speaker-grilles, allows far more sound to pass through. However, as we found in our 3. generation fabric using only knitted fabric; the density and thus resolution and sharpness is not sufficient. In combination with the front, weaved layer, however, the knitted fabric has found it´s rightful place in the grid; allowing sound to pass through very effeciently while reflecting (loads of) light!

The black backing layer increased perceived contrast and is also utilizing the knitted type of fabric so that sound will pass more effeciently.

The result is a sharp, dynamic, high-resolution image free from common artifacts such as moiré and visible structure even from very short seating distances (2m or less). We have tested both LCD, DLP, SXRD and D-ILA, currently in resolutions up to 4K from a number of distances, and there is simply no way the extremely fine-weaved surface will be able to create interference with the projected grid, thus create moiré. As it is the front-surface that provides the visible reflective surface to the viewer, even as resolutions increase to 8K or beyond, you can rest assured that the V5 UltraWeave fabric will keep providing a moiré-free reflection.

On our UltraWeave V6-fabric we have managed to increase the texture density by 30% and thus increasing sharpness even further.

The AT is also dramatically improved compared to our previous generations using the multi-layered method as the weaved front layer, which is really the main absorber of audio-transparency, can be made super-thin and thus significantly more AT than previous generations of fabric using a single reflective surface.

Glued, not tensioned layers

Although we have glued the layers in both our 1. and 2. revision, we did not on our 3. and 4. version as we simply did not manage to get the results we wanted on the primary production-runs. Gluing the layers is a complex process that we finally have mastered in our 5. generation of fabric. Imperfect tensioning, resulting in space between a front, single-reflecting layer and its black backing layer is quite damaging to both image-contrast and sharpness, especially on sharp contrasted-objects such as a starlit sky. Using several reflective layers made it even more crucial to keep the layers perfectly tensioned. On the V5 UltraWeave-fabric, there is no space between any of the layers which in turn creates a sharper and more contrasted reflection than is the case when trying to manually tension the layers of fabrics.

The integrated black backing, in addition to increasing perceived contrast, absorbs excessive light which in case might have reduced sharpness and given “halo” artifacts if light is reflected on a wall behind the screen and back.

Super flexible = quick & perfect installation

Installing a regularly weaved AT fabric can be a real challenge. When you are to tension up a separate black backing layer as well, often made up of the same stiff PVC-weave, it is very hard to avoid distance between the layers. As the V5 is made up of super-flexible, pre-attached layers, it´s really easier than ever to tension the fabric perfectly onto even heavily curved frames using the available flexible grip rails.

You can even glue the included grip rails to any wooden or existing aluminum frame if you do not purchase one of our frames but rather recycle your current one. If you do want a new frame, however, our ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave-frames includes fitted tracks, thus no need for glue. PS! For the moment, the ScreenAcoustics frames are not available in the US.


1: CUT RAILS


2: INSERT (OR GLUE)


3: ATTACH FABRIC

Installing the fabric is very easy and fast. First, you cut the grip rails to fit the frame. Then you attach the fabric, first the top long-side, then the bottom long-side and finally the two short-sides. You can use either a pizza-cutter or a spatula to insert the single-piece-fabric into the rails. After you have tensioned the fabric you cut off the excessive parts with a regular scissor.

Speckle free, full viewing-angle, high brightness reflection

One of the main issues with a number of projection-screens – especially those using a positive gain-factor, but also a number of ordinary gain fabrics – is the speckle phenomena. This is a quality-reducing incident that we have made huge efforts on avoiding. Speckled surfaces project a reduced resolution in brighter areas, as well as clear structural noise. Positive gain also reduces the stability of the viewing-angle, which is not the case for the UltraWeave V5 utilizing a matte, fully 160-degree constant-gain reflective surface.

For our fifth generation ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave we can proudly state speckle is no longer an issue, although the gain-factor is at an impressive 0.8. The gain of the UltraWeave V6 has been measured to 0.81.

Example of a (heavily) speckled (left) vs. a non-speckled (right) reflection

 

Color neutrality and D65 compability

First, there are no “D65” tuned screens available that would save you the calibration of your projector. As every projector, although some being quite close to D65 from factory, outputs a less than optimal color gamut and greyscale, you always need to calibrate your projector to fit the specific screen material that is used. There are no actual standards on how a projection-surface should look like in terms of reflection other than the fact that it should reflect as much D65-calibrated light as possible throughout the entire greyscale. As such, the screen needs to reflect as close to 6500K as possible and also make certain there are no color-shifts in red, green or blue that would require the calibrator to compensate by reducing the output of the other color-channels to balance the RGB-output.

The ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 has been carefully tuned to make certain as much light as possible is maintained from the projector when calibrated to D65. Although providing charts that demonstrate that the V5-fabric is able to reflect D65 has little value as ISF and THX-certified calibrators have already calibrated hundreds of projectors to D65 using this fabric during the last year or so, we have performed comparative tests in terms of light output available post-calibration from a given set of screen materials. As initial measures indicated, the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 measures about 0.8 gain compared to the regular non-perforated Stewart Studiotek 100, which is listed at 1.0 gain. Some loss of light-reflection is to be expected on an acoustical transparent screen that is matte white to begin with, and a level of 0.8 is actually very impressive in such regards. The regularly weaved acoustical transparent screen that we are benchmarking the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave to is rated by the manufactorer at 1.0 gain. However, we are measuring the reflection of this fabric to about 0.8 gain compared to the Stewart Studiotek 100 as well, thus in reality the same as the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave. This is consistent with our assumption that some producers, perhaps especially those of acoustical transparent screens, tend to inflate their listed gain-levels somewhat. Please see measures and methodology listed below.

Although the regularly weaved AT fabric we have benchmarked the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 towards is markedet, sold and generally perceived as a higher-end sound-transparent fabric, we will certainly do additional comparative measurement to other AT screens in the future.

TECHNICAL MEASUREMENTS / PROOF OF CONCEPT

ACOUSTIC TRANSPARENCY V6

Methodology is further elaborated below, but in short we have build a custom cabinet in highly rigourous MDF, insulated with absorption-material and a constant placement for the measurement-microphone. We use REW to analyse the A/B-measures with and without the fabric.

Measurements include all three layers of the V6-fabric (including the integrated black backing). 1/12-smoothing. Measurements indicate class-leading acoustic performance with a max drop of 2dB@20kHz and an average drop of just below 1,5dB.

COMPARISON TO REGULARLY WEAVED FABRIC

These measurements are made of a regularly weaved fabric. The measures are relevant only in terms of a general comparison as AT test-results are heavily dependent on methodology. Even the slightest movement of the measurement microphone may alter the results and the measurement box also introduces several cancellations and boosts. The producer of this particular regularly weaved AT fabric is rating it at 1.5dB maximum loss using front layer plus backing layer, and while our measurements indicate a somewhat higher (maximum) loss of about 2,4dB their average loss is still about 2,25dB while the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V6 is about 1,5dB using the same calculation- and measurement method. The regularly weaved AT fabric is measured using (the required) black backing layer in the same measurement-cabinet, A/B-measured vs. the V6 UltraWeave. 

MEASUREMENT METHOD

 
 
Our measurement-cabinet is fully isolated using a studio monitor to output the test-sweep to a calibrated miniDSP U-MIK microphone using REW-software on our mac to analyse the measurements. The microphone as well as the studio-monitor remains at the exact same location during measurements of each fabric to ensure repeatability. Several separate sweeps are made to make certain each measurement is fully repeatable. The various speaker fabrics are tensioned to an interchangeable frame and placed about 15cm in front of the monitor and about 40cm from the microphone. However, even a slightest movement of the microphone may alter the results, and the cabinet also introduces cancelleations and boosts due to its inherent dimensions. These measures are therefore first and foremost relevant in comparing the V6 to a regularly weaved type of fabric.

GAIN FACTOR – CURRENTLY OF THE UltraWeave V5, BUT THE V6 HAS BEEN MEASURED IN AT 0.81.

In general, many producers of AT fabrics seem to inflate their listed gain-levels. Stewart, however, has been a studio-reference for many years, and thus we assume their gain-levels are correctly listed, and as such we are using their Studiotek 100 as our reference.

When a matte white AT screen is listed to obtain a gain-level of 1.0 there is simply a logical breach somewhere. When adding holes for the sound to pass through a fabric, the consequence has to be that light-reflection is reduced accordingly unless the fabric has a more positive gain-factor than 1.0 to begin with. Gain-factors higher than 1.0 introduces a number of known artifacts such as reduced viewing-angle and potential speckle.

Although our measurements confirm our assumptions on the correlation of gain and sound-transparency, the D65-calibrated reflection-level of 0.8 found in both the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 and the regularly weaved AT screen is still very good. This is the level normally found in regular non-AT grey screens, and although both the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave and the regularly weaved AT screen has a matte white surface, the use of black backing layers actually makes the screen appear somewhat “grey” as it mixes in the backing to the reflection-matrix and thus – to some degree – boasts the black-level performance as is the case for grey-nuanced screens.

The calibrator that did these measurements is Gorm Sorensen, a Norwegian THX and ISF-certified calibrator, performing hundreds of calibrations every year. Calibrations are made in a «simulator», which is in essence is a batcave, covered in black fabric all over to make certain reflections will not reduce measurement-accuracy.

The measurement meter is a Klein K-10A referenced by a Photo Research PR670 spectroradiometer. Calman pro software.


Gorm Sorensen, an ISF and THX-certified professional calibrator, is performing the measurements

First, we calibrated a Sony VPL-HW55 projector to the Stewart Studiotek 100 @D65 (matte white, gain 1.0, non AT). The dE averaged at 1,1 on the Studiotek, and we did measurements of the light-reflection on the entire grayscale. The Studiotek topped at 361 candela / m2 at 100% and 231 at 80%.


First, the projector is D65-calibrated on our reference fabric, the Stewart Studiotek 100

Then, we placed the regularly weaved AT material directly on top of the Studiotek without any movement of the meter. The fabric reflected D65 with a dE of 1,12 after re-calibration to this particular fabric and reflected a maximum of 271 cd/m2 at 100% IRE and 173 cd/m2 at 80% IRE. The producer indicates a gain of 1.0, while our measurements clearly indicate that our assumption of inflated values are correct. Their measured reflection, calibrated at D65, is about 75% of what the Studiotek 100 reflects, by other words a gain-factor of about 0.75. Some light-reflection may be lost due to the D65-calibration, but certainly not as much as 25%. Our estimated gain-factor of this fabric is 0.8, leaving about 5% margin to (lacking) D65-corrective loss of light.


The regularly weaved AT screen fabric and then the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 is henceforth attached directly on top of the non-AT Stewart fabric to make certain there is as little distance-variations as possible. 

Last, we measured the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5. With an average dE after calibration of 0,85, the V5 measures 276 cd/m2 at 100% IRE and 176 cd/m2 at 80% IRE, about 76% of the 1.0 gain of the Studiotek and thus a gain-level of about 0.8 if taken into account that a little light may be lost due to the D65-calibrated reflection.

Conclusion
After calibration, which may take a small toll even from a neutral “D65” screen-fabric, the gain-level of the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave is at a comparable level of about 0.8 gain, the same as the regularly weaved fabric which is rated by the manufacturer to provide 1.0 gain. The regularly weaved fabric used to benchmark the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave is marketed and priced in the upper high-end segment, priced several times higher than the ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave.

Calibration data results Stewart Studiotek 100 calibrated at 6500K (reference)

Calibration data results of the regularly weaved fabric calibrated at 6500K (test fabric #1)

Calibration data results ScreenAcoustics UltraWeave V5 calibrated at 6500K (test fabric #2)

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