Silver Ticket 120" Fixed
Top PickWhat We Like
- Build quality and materials rival screens costing twice as much
- Picture quality is crisp, vibrant, and color-accurate for home theater
- Tension rod system keeps the fabric drum-tight with no wrinkles
- Velvet-wrapped aluminum frame absorbs projector overshoot for a clean border
Worth Noting
- Assembly instructions can be confusing; external video guides often needed
- Included drywall anchors are too weak for the screen weight; aftermarket fasteners recommended
- Size
- 120"
- Type
- Fixed Frame
- Material
- White matte
- Aspect Ratio
- 16:9
The Silver Ticket STR Series delivers a dead-flat projection surface that stays tensioned across the entire 120-inch diagonal. The 2 3/8-inch beveled aluminum frame with velvet border absorbs light around the edges, making the image pop like a commercial cinema screen. This is the benchmark for fixed-frame screens at this price point, and nearly 5,000 reviews back that claim.
Once assembled, the screen produces crisp, vibrant colors with a 160-degree viewing angle that suits wide seating arrangements. The 1.1 gain white matte material handles ambient light better than many budget screens, though it's still best suited for a darkened room. The tension rod system pulls the fabric taut from the center outward, preventing the wrinkles and sagging that plague cheaper fixed-frame designs.
Assembly is mostly straightforward: the frame pieces snap together, and the tension rods slot into pre-attached pockets. But the included drywall anchors are too weak for the screen's weight, and some users find the instructions unclear. Online video guides fill that gap, and replacing the hardware with toggle bolts or concrete anchors is a one-time fix. This is a permanent wall mount, not a portable option, so plan your install location carefully.
Tip: Replace the included drywall anchors with toggle bolts or concrete anchors during installation — the screen is heavy and standard plastic anchors may pull out over time.
Bottom line: For anyone building a dedicated home theater and willing to handle a one-time hardware swap, this screen delivers a reference-level flat image that holds its tension for years without sagging.