Anyway to force 3D Vision enable at 60Hz monitor? (i.e., shutter glasses operates at 30-30 for L/R e
Hi! I would like to try it out before investigating so much on both glasses + 120Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
[quote name='e-ghost' post='1086626' date='Jul 12 2010, 04:39 AM']Hi! I would like to try it out before investigating so much on both glasses + 120Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot![/quote]
Try what? If you just want to see the 3D effect, buy a $5 pair of Red/Cyan glasses off of Amazon and use Nvidia's drivers in Anaglyph mode. The colors will be all messed up, but you'll have some idea of what the depth will be like.
I don't believe there is a way to force 60Hz, but maybe someone else can help you there.
[quote name='e-ghost' post='1086626' date='Jul 12 2010, 04:39 AM']Hi! I would like to try it out before investigating so much on both glasses + 120Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
Try what? If you just want to see the 3D effect, buy a $5 pair of Red/Cyan glasses off of Amazon and use Nvidia's drivers in Anaglyph mode. The colors will be all messed up, but you'll have some idea of what the depth will be like.
I don't believe there is a way to force 60Hz, but maybe someone else can help you there.
Intel i7-4770k
EVGA GTX 780 Ti SC
ASRock Z87 Extreme4
8GB DDR3, 240GB Intel SSD, 3TB HDD
Cooler Master Siedon 120M Liquid Cooling
Dell 3007WFP-HC 30" 2560x1600
Alienware OptX AW2310 23" 1920x1080 with 3D Vision
Acer H5360 720p Projector with 3D Vision
ONKYO HT-S5300 7.1 Sound System
Logitech G19 Keyboard, G9 Mouse, G25 Wheel
Saitek X52 Pro and Rudder Pedals
[quote name='e-ghost' post='1086626' date='Jul 12 2010, 05:39 AM']Hi! I would like to try it out before investigating so much on both glasses + 120Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot![/quote]
It wont look like a good 3D effect on a 60HZ monitor because of flickering. Switching between left and right eye images should be fast enough so that our eyes don't notice the change and show us a 3D image. This is not possible on a 60Hz monitor. You should better get anaglyph glasses for 60Hz monitor.
[quote name='e-ghost' post='1086626' date='Jul 12 2010, 05:39 AM']Hi! I would like to try it out before investigating so much on both glasses + 120Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
It wont look like a good 3D effect on a 60HZ monitor because of flickering. Switching between left and right eye images should be fast enough so that our eyes don't notice the change and show us a 3D image. This is not possible on a 60Hz monitor. You should better get anaglyph glasses for 60Hz monitor.
I never had problems with the OLD CRT and the old glasses that did 30 FPSper eye there was a little flickering but it still provided me with the needed s3d, and I used to play for hours. I evben got the 3d HMD :( too bad I can't use them anymore with my current equipment.
I never had problems with the OLD CRT and the old glasses that did 30 FPSper eye there was a little flickering but it still provided me with the needed s3d, and I used to play for hours. I evben got the 3d HMD :( too bad I can't use them anymore with my current equipment.
Intel Core i9-9820x @ 3.30GHZ
32 gig Ram
2 EVGA RTX 2080 ti Gaming
3 X ASUS ROG SWIFT 27 144Hz G-SYNC Gaming 3D Monitor [PG278Q]
1 X ASUS VG278HE
Nvidia 3Dvision
Oculus Rift
HTC VIVE
Windows 10
You can go down to 100MHz I believe on CRT, but I think the decision to limit 3D Vision compatibility to only higher frame rates is a QC decision by Nvidia to help ensure the best possible experience as the biggest complaint from the older S3D kits were typically around the flickering and low refresh rates with the older solutions. I don't blame them tbh, once FPS drop into the 30-40 range the 3D experience deteriorates greatly imo.
You can go down to 100MHz I believe on CRT, but I think the decision to limit 3D Vision compatibility to only higher frame rates is a QC decision by Nvidia to help ensure the best possible experience as the biggest complaint from the older S3D kits were typically around the flickering and low refresh rates with the older solutions. I don't blame them tbh, once FPS drop into the 30-40 range the 3D experience deteriorates greatly imo.
[quote name='chiz' post='1086941' date='Jul 12 2010, 10:03 PM']You can go down to 100MHz I believe on CRT, but I think the decision to limit 3D Vision compatibility to only higher frame rates is a QC decision by Nvidia to help ensure the best possible experience as the biggest complaint from the older S3D kits were typically around the flickering and low refresh rates with the older solutions. I don't blame them tbh, once FPS drop into the 30-40 range the 3D experience deteriorates greatly imo.[/quote]
...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
[quote name='chiz' post='1086941' date='Jul 12 2010, 10:03 PM']You can go down to 100MHz I believe on CRT, but I think the decision to limit 3D Vision compatibility to only higher frame rates is a QC decision by Nvidia to help ensure the best possible experience as the biggest complaint from the older S3D kits were typically around the flickering and low refresh rates with the older solutions. I don't blame them tbh, once FPS drop into the 30-40 range the 3D experience deteriorates greatly imo.
...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
[quote name='tritosine' post='1086965' date='Jul 12 2010, 05:27 PM']...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.[/quote]
Actually it adds up just fine, any perceived problems you're trying to draw parallels to at 120Hz between CRT and LCD would be exponentially worst on a 60Hz LCD which is what the OP was asking about.
[quote name='tritosine' post='1086965' date='Jul 12 2010, 05:27 PM']...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
Actually it adds up just fine, any perceived problems you're trying to draw parallels to at 120Hz between CRT and LCD would be exponentially worst on a 60Hz LCD which is what the OP was asking about.
Apart from the fact that it would flicker quite a bit, it is an artificial limitation of the 3D Vision glasses. They work all the way down to 62 Hz (tried it with an old CRT) but not at exactly 60 Hz. Also, the limitiation seems to be with the glasses themselves, since the emitter still sends some kind of signal at 60 Hz, it's just the glasses that don't shutter anymore. So no, it won't work.
Apart from the fact that it would flicker quite a bit, it is an artificial limitation of the 3D Vision glasses. They work all the way down to 62 Hz (tried it with an old CRT) but not at exactly 60 Hz. Also, the limitiation seems to be with the glasses themselves, since the emitter still sends some kind of signal at 60 Hz, it's just the glasses that don't shutter anymore. So no, it won't work.
So i already bought the 3D Vision 2 set and 4 glasses, but due to false advertising my "600Hz" plasma ([u][b]Advertised as "600Hz the best you can get"[/b][/u]) only does 60 hz, is there a way to force 3D at 60 hz?, i and my family have tried it at 75Hz on a CRT and it was more than acceptable, watching a full movie did not cause headaches, thought.... jumping(?) was visible, i just want to be able to use it on my 50" for now untill i can find a suitable replacement
So i already bought the 3D Vision 2 set and 4 glasses, but due to false advertising my "600Hz" plasma (Advertised as "600Hz the best you can get") only does 60 hz, is there a way to force 3D at 60 hz?, i and my family have tried it at 75Hz on a CRT and it was more than acceptable, watching a full movie did not cause headaches, thought.... jumping(?) was visible, i just want to be able to use it on my 50" for now untill i can find a suitable replacement
600hz is not the TV's refresh rate, it's just a subfield driver filter or something like that. All 3DTVs available in the market have 60hz. There are no true 120hz or 240hz TVs, they only interpolate these signals to 120hz-240hz, but the input refresh rate is always 60hz. If you want true 120hz you might get a 120hz LCD/LED panel or some old CRT model. I don't know much about DLPs, so I can't talk about that since it was never sold in my country. But I believe they're also 60hz since they only work in Checkerboard mode.
I've played many games using my C7000 Samsung Plasma TV in Generic CRT mode using older Nvidia drivers, since the new drivers no longer support the CRT option.
I've played Batman Arkham City in Generic CRT mode (Frame sequential) using Rollermod at 1080p60hz = 30fps per eye, and I didn't notice any considerable flicking. My TV's 3D glasses are not that good, so they sometimes flicker, but that also happens in bluray3D, nothing to do with the lower refresh rate and more linked to the infrared glasses solution that caused these issues. Off course If I could play Batman with higher FPS it would be better, but playing it at 30fs, was not really that bad and the 3D image was amazing and very crispy. Believe me, 1080p30hz (CRT mode) is way better for gaming than 1080p24hz (3DTV Play).
600hz is not the TV's refresh rate, it's just a subfield driver filter or something like that. All 3DTVs available in the market have 60hz. There are no true 120hz or 240hz TVs, they only interpolate these signals to 120hz-240hz, but the input refresh rate is always 60hz. If you want true 120hz you might get a 120hz LCD/LED panel or some old CRT model. I don't know much about DLPs, so I can't talk about that since it was never sold in my country. But I believe they're also 60hz since they only work in Checkerboard mode.
I've played many games using my C7000 Samsung Plasma TV in Generic CRT mode using older Nvidia drivers, since the new drivers no longer support the CRT option.
I've played Batman Arkham City in Generic CRT mode (Frame sequential) using Rollermod at 1080p60hz = 30fps per eye, and I didn't notice any considerable flicking. My TV's 3D glasses are not that good, so they sometimes flicker, but that also happens in bluray3D, nothing to do with the lower refresh rate and more linked to the infrared glasses solution that caused these issues. Off course If I could play Batman with higher FPS it would be better, but playing it at 30fs, was not really that bad and the 3D image was amazing and very crispy. Believe me, 1080p30hz (CRT mode) is way better for gaming than 1080p24hz (3DTV Play).
Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bits - Core i7 2600K @ 4.5ghz - Asus Maximus IV Extreme Z68 - Geforce EVGA GTX 690 - 8GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600 9-9-9-24 (2T) - Thermaltake Armor+ - SSD Intel 510 Series Sata3 256GB - HD WD Caviar Black Sata3 64mb 2TB - HD WD Caviar Black 1TB Sata3 64mb - Bose Sound System - LG H20L GGW Blu Ray/DVD/CD RW - LG GH20 DVD RAM - PSU Thermaltake Toughpower 1000W - Samsung S27A950D 3D Vision Ready + 3D HDTV SAMSUNG PL63C7000 3DTVPLAY + ROLLERMOD CHECKERBOARD
Unfortunately, you bought some of the worst glasses for 3D on the market. They are only good for 2 things gaming with Nvidia 3D Vision or PC Blu-ray 3D playback. They will not work with a PS3, XBox, Stand alone Blu-ray player or broadcast set top box. Also, they will not work with 3DTV Play, although the emitter will unlock/enable 3DTV Play.
If Nvidia wanted to increase their sales of 3D Glasses, they'd come up with a stand alone HDMI adapter that would drive their emitter with these other devices. Or a card that would allow input of these signals into the pc for pass through and signal sync. But of course, that's not happening.
Since you are viewing with the whole family, a 3D Vision projector may be a viable alternative. Otherwise, you need to return the glasses, since they are not made to work with TVs. Although they may work with some of the Mitsubishi checkerboard HD 3DTVs (I've no idea), which you could probably find cheap on Craigs List.
http://www.nvidia.com/object/3d-vision-displays.html
You do not list your model number of your TV. Is it a 3D TV? To be a HD 3DTV, it needs a 3D signal processor. If it's not a 3D TV, you don't have many choices. The HD 3DFury is an add-on 3D signal processer, it has a sync signal port that will allow for an emitter to be connected. Unfortunately, the Nvidia glasses will not work via this as far as I know. As the 3DFury just released, there are no reports on the picture quality you'd get using it. It's also about $400, kinda expensive, to get your Plasma 3D Ready if it isn't already.
Unfortunately, you bought some of the worst glasses for 3D on the market. They are only good for 2 things gaming with Nvidia 3D Vision or PC Blu-ray 3D playback. They will not work with a PS3, XBox, Stand alone Blu-ray player or broadcast set top box. Also, they will not work with 3DTV Play, although the emitter will unlock/enable 3DTV Play.
If Nvidia wanted to increase their sales of 3D Glasses, they'd come up with a stand alone HDMI adapter that would drive their emitter with these other devices. Or a card that would allow input of these signals into the pc for pass through and signal sync. But of course, that's not happening.
Since you are viewing with the whole family, a 3D Vision projector may be a viable alternative. Otherwise, you need to return the glasses, since they are not made to work with TVs. Although they may work with some of the Mitsubishi checkerboard HD 3DTVs (I've no idea), which you could probably find cheap on Craigs List.
You do not list your model number of your TV. Is it a 3D TV? To be a HD 3DTV, it needs a 3D signal processor. If it's not a 3D TV, you don't have many choices. The HD 3DFury is an add-on 3D signal processer, it has a sync signal port that will allow for an emitter to be connected. Unfortunately, the Nvidia glasses will not work via this as far as I know. As the 3DFury just released, there are no reports on the picture quality you'd get using it. It's also about $400, kinda expensive, to get your Plasma 3D Ready if it isn't already.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot![/quote]
Try what? If you just want to see the 3D effect, buy a $5 pair of Red/Cyan glasses off of Amazon and use Nvidia's drivers in Anaglyph mode. The colors will be all messed up, but you'll have some idea of what the depth will be like.
I don't believe there is a way to force 60Hz, but maybe someone else can help you there.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
Try what? If you just want to see the 3D effect, buy a $5 pair of Red/Cyan glasses off of Amazon and use Nvidia's drivers in Anaglyph mode. The colors will be all messed up, but you'll have some idea of what the depth will be like.
I don't believe there is a way to force 60Hz, but maybe someone else can help you there.
Intel i7-4770k
EVGA GTX 780 Ti SC
ASRock Z87 Extreme4
8GB DDR3, 240GB Intel SSD, 3TB HDD
Cooler Master Siedon 120M Liquid Cooling
Dell 3007WFP-HC 30" 2560x1600
Alienware OptX AW2310 23" 1920x1080 with 3D Vision
Acer H5360 720p Projector with 3D Vision
ONKYO HT-S5300 7.1 Sound System
Logitech G19 Keyboard, G9 Mouse, G25 Wheel
Saitek X52 Pro and Rudder Pedals
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot![/quote]
It wont look like a good 3D effect on a 60HZ monitor because of flickering. Switching between left and right eye images should be fast enough so that our eyes don't notice the change and show us a 3D image. This is not possible on a 60Hz monitor. You should better get anaglyph glasses for 60Hz monitor.
If I willing to at least buy the NVIDIA 3D Vision Glasses, anyway that I can able my monitor to flip L/R frame at 30-30 Hz along with the glassess?
Thanks a lot!
It wont look like a good 3D effect on a 60HZ monitor because of flickering. Switching between left and right eye images should be fast enough so that our eyes don't notice the change and show us a 3D image. This is not possible on a 60Hz monitor. You should better get anaglyph glasses for 60Hz monitor.
Intel Core i9-9820x @ 3.30GHZ
32 gig Ram
2 EVGA RTX 2080 ti Gaming
3 X ASUS ROG SWIFT 27 144Hz G-SYNC Gaming 3D Monitor [PG278Q]
1 X ASUS VG278HE
Nvidia 3Dvision
Oculus Rift
HTC VIVE
Windows 10
-=HeliX=- Mod 3DV Game Fixes
My 3D Vision Games List Ratings
Intel Core i7 5930K @4.5GHz | Gigabyte X99 Gaming 5 | Win10 x64 Pro | Corsair H105
Nvidia GeForce Titan X SLI Hybrid | ROG Swift PG278Q 144Hz + 3D Vision/G-Sync | 32GB Adata DDR4 2666
Intel Samsung 950Pro SSD | Samsung EVO 4x1 RAID 0 |
Yamaha VX-677 A/V Receiver | Polk Audio RM6880 7.1 | LG Blu-Ray
Auzen X-Fi HT HD | Logitech G710/G502/G27 | Corsair Air 540 | EVGA P2-1200W
...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
...let's just say, what nvidia ( better yet : the GEFORCE company) wants, doesn't add up.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.[/quote]
Actually it adds up just fine, any perceived problems you're trying to draw parallels to at 120Hz between CRT and LCD would be exponentially worst on a 60Hz LCD which is what the OP was asking about.
At least a CRT at 120hz does 50/50 duty cycle shuttering. As it does it at 85hz, so 85hz 50/50 duty cycle might be better than 120hz LCD with worse duty cycle.
I'd go wtih a CRT over LCD ANY DAY.
You can look at projectors, CRT is still the king(?), LCD is the cheap plastic. And microdisplays like DLP are the best technology to be offered yet.
Actually it adds up just fine, any perceived problems you're trying to draw parallels to at 120Hz between CRT and LCD would be exponentially worst on a 60Hz LCD which is what the OP was asking about.
-=HeliX=- Mod 3DV Game Fixes
My 3D Vision Games List Ratings
Intel Core i7 5930K @4.5GHz | Gigabyte X99 Gaming 5 | Win10 x64 Pro | Corsair H105
Nvidia GeForce Titan X SLI Hybrid | ROG Swift PG278Q 144Hz + 3D Vision/G-Sync | 32GB Adata DDR4 2666
Intel Samsung 950Pro SSD | Samsung EVO 4x1 RAID 0 |
Yamaha VX-677 A/V Receiver | Polk Audio RM6880 7.1 | LG Blu-Ray
Auzen X-Fi HT HD | Logitech G710/G502/G27 | Corsair Air 540 | EVGA P2-1200W
CPU: Intel Core i7 920 @ 3.40 GHz
GPU: Geforce GTX 480 @ 850/2000 MHz, Geforce GTX 460 (PhysX/CUDA)
RAM: 6 GB OCZ DDR3-1333 CL7
MOBO: ASUS P6T
PSU: Enermax Pro82+ 625 W
HDD: SuperTalent Ultradrive GX2 128 GB, 2x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 TB
SOUND: Creative X-Fi Elite Pro
DISPLAY: Dell 3007 WFP, Geforce 3D Vision on eMachines V700
INPUT: Logitech G5 + G11
OS: Windows 7 Professional x64
I've played many games using my C7000 Samsung Plasma TV in Generic CRT mode using older Nvidia drivers, since the new drivers no longer support the CRT option.
I've played Batman Arkham City in Generic CRT mode (Frame sequential) using Rollermod at 1080p60hz = 30fps per eye, and I didn't notice any considerable flicking. My TV's 3D glasses are not that good, so they sometimes flicker, but that also happens in bluray3D, nothing to do with the lower refresh rate and more linked to the infrared glasses solution that caused these issues. Off course If I could play Batman with higher FPS it would be better, but playing it at 30fs, was not really that bad and the 3D image was amazing and very crispy. Believe me, 1080p30hz (CRT mode) is way better for gaming than 1080p24hz (3DTV Play).
I've played many games using my C7000 Samsung Plasma TV in Generic CRT mode using older Nvidia drivers, since the new drivers no longer support the CRT option.
I've played Batman Arkham City in Generic CRT mode (Frame sequential) using Rollermod at 1080p60hz = 30fps per eye, and I didn't notice any considerable flicking. My TV's 3D glasses are not that good, so they sometimes flicker, but that also happens in bluray3D, nothing to do with the lower refresh rate and more linked to the infrared glasses solution that caused these issues. Off course If I could play Batman with higher FPS it would be better, but playing it at 30fs, was not really that bad and the 3D image was amazing and very crispy. Believe me, 1080p30hz (CRT mode) is way better for gaming than 1080p24hz (3DTV Play).
Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bits - Core i7 2600K @ 4.5ghz - Asus Maximus IV Extreme Z68 - Geforce EVGA GTX 690 - 8GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600 9-9-9-24 (2T) - Thermaltake Armor+ - SSD Intel 510 Series Sata3 256GB - HD WD Caviar Black Sata3 64mb 2TB - HD WD Caviar Black 1TB Sata3 64mb - Bose Sound System - LG H20L GGW Blu Ray/DVD/CD RW - LG GH20 DVD RAM - PSU Thermaltake Toughpower 1000W - Samsung S27A950D 3D Vision Ready + 3D HDTV SAMSUNG PL63C7000 3DTVPLAY + ROLLERMOD CHECKERBOARD
If Nvidia wanted to increase their sales of 3D Glasses, they'd come up with a stand alone HDMI adapter that would drive their emitter with these other devices. Or a card that would allow input of these signals into the pc for pass through and signal sync. But of course, that's not happening.
Since you are viewing with the whole family, a 3D Vision projector may be a viable alternative. Otherwise, you need to return the glasses, since they are not made to work with TVs. Although they may work with some of the Mitsubishi checkerboard HD 3DTVs (I've no idea), which you could probably find cheap on Craigs List.
http://www.nvidia.com/object/3d-vision-displays.html
You do not list your model number of your TV. Is it a 3D TV? To be a HD 3DTV, it needs a 3D signal processor. If it's not a 3D TV, you don't have many choices. The HD 3DFury is an add-on 3D signal processer, it has a sync signal port that will allow for an emitter to be connected. Unfortunately, the Nvidia glasses will not work via this as far as I know. As the 3DFury just released, there are no reports on the picture quality you'd get using it. It's also about $400, kinda expensive, to get your Plasma 3D Ready if it isn't already.
If Nvidia wanted to increase their sales of 3D Glasses, they'd come up with a stand alone HDMI adapter that would drive their emitter with these other devices. Or a card that would allow input of these signals into the pc for pass through and signal sync. But of course, that's not happening.
Since you are viewing with the whole family, a 3D Vision projector may be a viable alternative. Otherwise, you need to return the glasses, since they are not made to work with TVs. Although they may work with some of the Mitsubishi checkerboard HD 3DTVs (I've no idea), which you could probably find cheap on Craigs List.
http://www.nvidia.com/object/3d-vision-displays.html
You do not list your model number of your TV. Is it a 3D TV? To be a HD 3DTV, it needs a 3D signal processor. If it's not a 3D TV, you don't have many choices. The HD 3DFury is an add-on 3D signal processer, it has a sync signal port that will allow for an emitter to be connected. Unfortunately, the Nvidia glasses will not work via this as far as I know. As the 3DFury just released, there are no reports on the picture quality you'd get using it. It's also about $400, kinda expensive, to get your Plasma 3D Ready if it isn't already.