[mythtv-users] OT: Buying a new TV - Sharp Quattron or 3D?

Phil Wild phil at holobyte.com.au
Thu Jun 9 06:25:49 UTC 2011


>
>
>
> Except shutter glasses ARE polarized glasses.  They're nothing more than
> tiny LCD screens.  Your LCD screen works by having two polarized
> filters, one static, one dynamic.  Light passes through the static
> filter and becomes polarized.  The dynamic filter can adjust plane, and
> depending on the angle, determines how much light comes through.
>
> With passive glasses, you have two linear filters at perpendicular
> angles.  Each will only allow the in-plane light through.  With active
> glasses, you have a static filter, which must be in the same plane as
> that in the TV, and another dynamic filter which flips between the two
> maximums to allow or block light.  So, any deficiencies that may exist
> with passive glasses MUST exist with active glasses.
> _______________________________________________
>

Are you sure?

When I used to work at SGI, the shutter glasses we used would black out the
left eye, followed by the right eye synchronised with the refresh rate of
the monitor (usually running at 120Hz). There was an infra-red emitter
placed on top of the screen to synchronise the shutter glasses. So full
resolution at half the perceived frame rate.

I was under the impression that this is how the 3D TV worked in that the odd
and even frames were left and right eye and the glasses made sure the
correct eye viewed the correct frames. One eye seeing black while the other
eye viewed the image would mean that your brain perceived the image as 50%
brightness as well.

Cheers

Phil
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