Whether you’ve seen it at a friend’s decked-out home theater room, or spotted it in a design magazine, mounting your TV above the fireplace has become somewhat of a trend. A nice fireplace setup can be the focal point of your room, so throwing your beautiful new TV there makes a lot of sense.
Sure, it might make your living room look great, or it may be the best or only option you have in your limited space, but there are some good reasons you should avoid mounting your TV above the fireplace, and we’re here to lay them out for you before you start drilling holes.
Heat + electronics = bad
Electronics don’t care for heat, and they care for smoke even less. Have you ever seen the windows inside the car of a cigarette smoker? Unless the smoking driver is an equally habitual window washer, those windows are covered with a hazy film of filth. Exposed to the smoke of burning wood, a similar film can build up on the components inside a television cabinet.
You may not see the particulate when you have a fire, but it is there (you can smell it). If you burn wood — even with the flue open — there will be a small amount of smoke and particulate emitted. And once that particulate builds up, so does the heat generated by the TV. Look at a wood-burning stove as an example. The heat generated by this is enough to melt candles placed several feet above the mantle — after all, generating heat is what it’s designed to do. Think about what that same heat can do to all the sensitive components inside a television.
To ensure we aren’t just blowing smoke, we spoke to Brian Sevigny, owner of Portland, Oregon-based A/V installation service Digital Connex. He told us he gets asked to install TV’s over fireplaces frequently. When we asked him if he encouraged or discouraged the practice, he was quick to jump in. “Discourage,” Sevigny said firmly, “primarily because of the heat and the smoke.”
Most electronic devices operate best and most reliably at lower temperatures. Beyond that, excessive heat can cause temperature-sensitive materials to degrade quickly, and conductive materials can even sprout little metal whiskers, causing shorts within the TV’s circuitry. Additionally, the combustion process leads to the creation of caustic compounds — including phenols and pyroligneous acid or wood vinegar — and we all know acid doesn’t mix well with electronics.
However, if you have a more conventional wood-burning fireplace — and especially if you have a gas fireplace insert — you’re probably going to be just fine. That TV may die earlier than it has to, but you will probably replace it before then anyway.
It’s a pain in the neck
Placing a TV up high or above a fireplace moves the image you’re trying to watch well above eye level — which is considered the ideal viewing experience. And while many people prefer a raised setup and might not have any issues with it, there’s a chance it could cause some discomfort. Think back to the last time you went to the movie theater and had to sit in one of the front three rows. Chances are you walked out of the theater with a stiff neck. Craning your neck into an unnatural position for an extended period will cause temporary discomfort, but doing so for even short periods, day after day, can have lasting effects, like chronic headaches.
Neck headaches become a problem when you start protruding your chin forward with that “looking up” posture.
We spoke to Brad Simpson, a physical therapist and clinical director at Life’s Work Physical Therapy. Simpson’s clinic treats patients with multiple types of musculoskeletal problems, and he is an expert in ergonomics. Simpson says that repeatedly sitting in an unnatural position can have lasting repercussions.
“It ends up putting your body in a position where your deep-neck stabilizers, muscle-wise — it’s kind of like the core of your lower back, but up in your neck — aren’t able to function. That position where you have to push your head forward and up to look up at the television compromises those muscles,” Simpson said. “Having your head forward like that causes a shearing force within your mid-cervical spine. That’s where a lot of pain ends up coming from … you lose the ability for your neck to stabilize.”
Muscle pain isn’t the only thing you can suffer from. Headaches are a huge problem in our population, and neck headaches become a problem as well when you start protruding your chin forward with that “looking up” posture, Simpson said. He also indicated that this poor posture leads to improper breathing, which causes us to overuse certain muscles, becoming yet another source of pain. The main takeaway from our interview: It’s not worth the pain.
Six degrees of separation from a beautiful picture
On this issue, there is no debate. We review many TVs every year, and the viewing angle on LED/LCD TVs remains a problem, even among top-tier TVs.
An LCD screen (which you find on “LED” TVs) is essentially made up of many tiny, shuttered windows. These windows open and close to let the TV’s backlight through, thus creating an image. The problem with these windows is that they have a minimum viewing angle. Suppose you move too far left, right, up, or down and you start seeing a fraction of the produced light. The result is a washed-out, lifeless picture — hardly what you had in mind when you laid out hard-earned cash for a new television.
The good news here is that you have some options to mitigate this problem. The first is to buy a tilting wall mount with enough down angle to give you a more direct view of the screen. Even mounts will drop the TV down closer to your eye level (make sure the fireplace isn’t in use, though). Either option will improve both color saturation and contrast.
The second option is to purchase an OLED TV (not to be confused with a QLED TV), which has a nearly infinite viewing angle and will look amazing no matter how high you place the TV. There are plenty of other reasons why OLED wins in an OLED vs. LED TV battle. If an OLED TV isn’t an option for you, consider an LED TV that uses an IPS LCD panel.
It’s just not stylish
While we may have the design sense of a color-blind hippopotamus (no offense to hippopotamuses, but they do spend a lot of time in the mud), we’re really good at finding experts on just about anything. So we reached out to Garrison Hullinger, owner of Garrison Hullinger Interior Design. We asked him if he had a TV mounted over his fireplace. “No, I live in a 100-plus-year-old home and would never put a TV in my formal living room over the fireplace,” Hullinger told us. “We also have a beach house with a fireplace in the formal living room, and choose not to hang a TV in that room.”
Again, though, most modern homes have rooms built around this idea. Hullinger told us about 25% of the homes he has walked into had one wired location and were ready for a TV over the fireplace. Sevigny echoed that estimation when he told us that almost all of the new construction he has seen “will have electrical and coax connections already installed above the fireplace.” We can think of only one way that would significantly diminish the inherent ugliness of a big, dark rectangle floating above your mantel: Buy a TV that can do double-duty as an art frame when you’re not watching it. Samsung’s two models of lifestyle TVs, the aptly named The Frame and The Serif, can display a wide variety of artwork, or information screens, when not in use. If your fireplace wall has an especially unique appearance, you can even mirror that look on the screen instead.
Since this article was first written, we’ve made a point of keeping an eye out for well-thought-out counter-arguments. So far, most of them come down to, “these problems aren’t really problems if you use the right TV mount,” which we suppose is mostly true. But the right mounting tech is only part of the answer.
But I have to (or want to) anyway. What can I do to make the best of it?
In an ideal world, you would place your television in another room purpose-built for enjoying TV and maybe make music the focus of your main living area. However, everyone’s space is unique and has different limitations. If you like the idea and look of mounting your TV over your fireplace, go for it. Or if you have no other choice, here are a few suggestions to make the best of it.
- Reduce the heat: Dave Napoleon of CloudNine AV says installing a mantel over a fireplace can significantly reduce the amount of heat that rises from a fireplace. It’s also worth noting that fireplaces with built-in blowers will likely give off less heat directly up toward your TV.
- Sit further back if you can: As you move away from the TV’s location, the severity of the angle at which you must crane your neck is reduced.
- Lounge it out! Kick back and relax when you watch TV. You will eliminate the need to crane your neck entirely.
- Use a tilting or motorized wall mount: Altering the TV’s angle to get a more direct view of the TV will improve picture quality.
- Purchase an OLED TV: In addition to providing an outstanding picture and a super-thin profile, OLED TVs have no viewing-angle problems. Just beware that, as mentioned above, electronics aren’t exactly fond of heat and smoke, so be extra careful with your pricey new OLED.
- Don’t have a fire and watch TV at the same time: The flicker of the fire and added brightness in a darkened room can play with your pupils and strain your eyes while watching. It’s also a bit of a distraction. If the two are close together, perhaps enjoy just one or the other at a time.
- Hire a professional installer: Not only will a professional be able to handle cable management for a clean install, they come armed with other helpful suggestions to make the most of your TV installation.
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