Hey guys, I'm surprised to see that no where in my nvidia 3d glasses kit does it actually say how to clean the glasses. Do you just wipe with green cloth, or do we also use a liquid of some sort? Any help? Thank you ahead of time!
Hey guys, I'm surprised to see that no where in my nvidia 3d glasses kit does it actually say how to clean the glasses. Do you just wipe with green cloth, or do we also use a liquid of some sort? Any help? Thank you ahead of time!
[quote name='Lethorian' post='595339' date='Oct 2 2009, 02:33 PM']Hey guys, I'm surprised to see that no where in my nvidia 3d glasses kit does it actually say how to clean the glasses. Do you just wipe with green cloth, or do we also use a liquid of some sort? Any help? Thank you ahead of time![/quote]
I'd guess it depends on what your are trying to clean off them. :)
The supplied cloth should be sufficient for the usual suspects (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but if you happen to have something a bit errr...stickier (red bull, coke...bodily fluids) on them, I would think a gentle wipe with a soft cloth dampned with warm H20, followed up immediately with a wipe over with the green cloth wouldn't cause any damage. I certainly wouldn't recomend any type of solvent or commercial cleaner/alcohol.
The lenses are actually genuine glass so while they are potentially fragile, they are also pretty scratch resistant.
[quote name='Lethorian' post='595339' date='Oct 2 2009, 02:33 PM']Hey guys, I'm surprised to see that no where in my nvidia 3d glasses kit does it actually say how to clean the glasses. Do you just wipe with green cloth, or do we also use a liquid of some sort? Any help? Thank you ahead of time!
I'd guess it depends on what your are trying to clean off them. :)
The supplied cloth should be sufficient for the usual suspects (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but if you happen to have something a bit errr...stickier (red bull, coke...bodily fluids) on them, I would think a gentle wipe with a soft cloth dampned with warm H20, followed up immediately with a wipe over with the green cloth wouldn't cause any damage. I certainly wouldn't recomend any type of solvent or commercial cleaner/alcohol.
The lenses are actually genuine glass so while they are potentially fragile, they are also pretty scratch resistant.
[quote name='Freke1' post='595534' date='Oct 3 2009, 03:29 AM']I have some other shutterglasses that I have cleaned with alcohol many many times.[/quote]
Sure. I'm not saying it wouldn't work or even that it would cause any damage (chances are it won't), just that cloth dampened with a little water should be sufficient for most cleaning purposes.
[quote name='Freke1' post='595534' date='Oct 3 2009, 03:29 AM']I have some other shutterglasses that I have cleaned with alcohol many many times.
Sure. I'm not saying it wouldn't work or even that it would cause any damage (chances are it won't), just that cloth dampened with a little water should be sufficient for most cleaning purposes.
I'd guess it depends on what your are trying to clean off them. :)
The supplied cloth should be sufficient for the usual suspects (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but if you happen to have something a bit errr...stickier (red bull, coke...bodily fluids) on them, I would think a gentle wipe with a soft cloth dampned with warm H20, followed up immediately with a wipe over with the green cloth wouldn't cause any damage. I certainly wouldn't recomend any type of solvent or commercial cleaner/alcohol.
The lenses are actually genuine glass so while they are potentially fragile, they are also pretty scratch resistant.
I'd guess it depends on what your are trying to clean off them. :)
The supplied cloth should be sufficient for the usual suspects (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but if you happen to have something a bit errr...stickier (red bull, coke...bodily fluids) on them, I would think a gentle wipe with a soft cloth dampned with warm H20, followed up immediately with a wipe over with the green cloth wouldn't cause any damage. I certainly wouldn't recomend any type of solvent or commercial cleaner/alcohol.
The lenses are actually genuine glass so while they are potentially fragile, they are also pretty scratch resistant.
Sure. I'm not saying it wouldn't work or even that it would cause any damage (chances are it won't), just that cloth dampened with a little water should be sufficient for most cleaning purposes.
Sure. I'm not saying it wouldn't work or even that it would cause any damage (chances are it won't), just that cloth dampened with a little water should be sufficient for most cleaning purposes.