Construction Planning With Projection Distance
A projector room works best when distance is planned before drilling. BenQ units can use different lenses, zoom ranges, and mounting clearances. This calculator helps convert those details into practical layout numbers. It starts with the screen diagonal and aspect ratio. Then it finds the actual image width. The width is the key value because throw ratio always uses image width, not diagonal size.
Why Distance Matters
Correct distance protects the image, the room, and the installer. A projector placed too close may create an image that is too large. A projector placed too far may fail to fill the screen. In construction work, this also affects conduit paths, ceiling plates, shelves, power outlets, and service access. A small planning error can move the mount several inches. That can leave visible patching, blocked ventilation, or awkward cable bends.
Using Throw Ratio
Throw ratio describes how many distance units are needed for each unit of image width. A 1.30 ratio means the lens should sit 1.30 feet away for every foot of screen width. Zoom lenses use a minimum and maximum ratio. The calculator uses both values and returns a safe placement range. You can enter a custom ratio from a BenQ manual for better accuracy. You can also compare screen sizes before choosing a final mount point.
Mounting Notes
Use the lens position, not the back of the projector, as the main distance point. Add a rear clearance allowance when checking total room depth. Leave space for ventilation, cables, tilt adjustment, and future service. Check ceiling height and screen bottom height before fixing brackets. Lens shift and keystone correction should solve small alignment issues only. They should not replace careful mounting.
Best Use
This tool is suitable for home theaters, classrooms, meeting rooms, shops, and temporary buildouts. It gives a planning estimate, not a structural approval. Always confirm the selected BenQ model sheet before final drilling. Measure the finished wall, trim, screen border, and ceiling surface. Recheck results after any screen change. Careful preparation saves time, prevents damage, and creates a cleaner projection installation. Document measured values on site, and keep them with the construction drawings for later repairs or equipment replacement work.