Kamis, 20 Februari 2014

Are all 120hz LCD HDTVs compatible with shutter style 3d glasses?

Q. Are the new 3d TVs that are coming out this year completely 3d or do they also utilize the shutter style 3d glasses?

A. Yes to both of your statements. The new 3D TVs being rolled out currently, and their companion glasses, are both active-shutter technology.

Other formats will be forthcoming--one manufacturer is working on a dual polarization technology that will require another type of special glasses. Way down the road, the advent of OLED displays will make 3D possible with either no glasses or very simple ones.

But for now, your choice is limited to active-shutter sets and glasses.

There is a downside to the active-shutter glasses that the advertisers aren't telling everyone. When you're wearing them, the only thing you can look at is the TV screen while it is showing 3D. If you look around the room during a program, you'll see a very annoying chopped image that you won't like.


Do 3D movies work on LCD HDTVs?
Q. If so, do they work for all of them?
If not, would they work on mine? I have a 46 inch Toshiba Regza 120hz

http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?logon=&langid=EN&sku_id=0770HDS0010122883&catid=

I'm not entirely sure if my TV accepts 120hz signals, or if it just sort of "fakes" it. I have it connected to my PC and there is no 120hz option available.

A. It is hard to say at this point because the whole home 3d thing is still up in the air. At the Computer Electronics Show this week companies will be having the 3d technology they will make available later this year or next for consumers. 120 hz is the refresh rate that is said to be used for it so far. They may come out with a converter box that can go with a 120 hz television that is not necessarily labeled 3d ready. I had the old field sequential 3d system that worked with the CRT televisions. It used the 100 hz that they used.





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