In addition
to the Elite EzFrame that I was sent, I was also sent Elite’s
new Cinetension electric screen. As with the EzFrame, the
Cinetension is part of Elite’s new higher-end line,
designed to meet the needs of the more demanding consumer.
This is a tab-tensioned design, which the key part of this
is the lack of waves/wrinkles. However, this screen is revolutionary
from one standpoint…price. The Elite Cinetension screen
retails for about what most other companies non-tensioned
screens sell for. This is a big advantage for those looking
for quality performance, but also are still budget conscious.
I received my test unit in a timely fashion. The first thing
I noted was the weight…62lbs. Now this is not an overly
large screen that I used for testing, but it still weighed
a substantial amount. This generally corresponds to a heavier
duty unit. The box was about normal size for an electric,
8”x8”x~96”. The test unit I had was a 45”x80”
as an aside. I opened the outside of the box and lo and behold
another box! If you have read my reviews you know I love double
boxing, especially with this sort of specialized gear. I should
mention that in addition to the double boxing, the actual
boxes were thicker than normal (corrugated cardboard, of course);
very heavy duty. I continued on, opening the boxes. Inside,
there was the screen. Surprisingly though it was double boxed,
the inside protection was a bit scarce (see pictures). Basically
there were 2 end cardboard protectors and then 4 thick foam
wraps on the screen. I cannot comment on if this has proven
to be sufficient, as I don’t know. But for a screen
this size, compared to how some other companies’ internal
packing looks, this was potentially a bit light in my opinion.
Essentially delivery companies are having a lot of trust put
into them to transport these carefully. From my experience,
that could be dangerous. Again, it may have proven to work
fine for Elite, but I just wanted to point that out.
Moving on, I took everything out of the box. As I mentioned,
the screen had some serious heft to it. It was definitely
a larger roller design (likely 3”), which tends to be
the better type for supporting the fabric weight. Inside the
box were a couple small accessory boxes, and a manual. In
one box were the control parts. Perhaps the most impressive
thing about this model is that though it is already priced
well below the competition, they include both IR and RF remotes
at no additional charge! This is often a $250+ option for
many companies (just for 1 of them). Because of this, there
is no hardwiring that needs to be done. You simply take the
main control box, and plug it into the small 3-pin connector
on the case. Then that box simply plugs into a standard wall
outlet. Piece of cake. The only tricky part of hooking this
up was hiding that control box somewhere. The case is big
enough to hide it behind, but then you would have to extend
it off of the wall a bit.
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