I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?[/quote]
I don't think you can use Nvidia glasses as well as DLP link glasses side by side because they both use different technologies. I have not tried it so may be someone who has might shed some light on this.
Synchronization should not be an issue as long as you use same type of glasses and they are within the range of the synchronization signal source. Nvidia emitter can send signals to all the glasses in the IR range. Similarily DLP link glasses can send signal (a steak of white light through the projected image) to multiple glasses in range.
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I don't think you can use Nvidia glasses as well as DLP link glasses side by side because they both use different technologies. I have not tried it so may be someone who has might shed some light on this.
Synchronization should not be an issue as long as you use same type of glasses and they are within the range of the synchronization signal source. Nvidia emitter can send signals to all the glasses in the IR range. Similarily DLP link glasses can send signal (a steak of white light through the projected image) to multiple glasses in range.
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?[/quote]
I don't think you can use Nvidia glasses as well as DLP link glasses side by side because they both use different technologies. I have not tried it so may be someone who has might shed some light on this.
Synchronization should not be an issue as long as you use same type of glasses and they are within the range of the synchronization signal source. Nvidia emitter can send signals to all the glasses in the IR range. Similarily DLP link glasses can send signal (a steak of white light through the projected image) to multiple glasses in range.
I've been ordering a pair of NEC DLP 3D glasses, so that a second person can dive with me into the worlds of 3d vision. I've got an Acer H5360, so it should be no problem to run these glasses along with my nvidia glasses when putting the projector into DLP 3D mode. There is an option to toggle left/right eye, so it should be possible to link these glasses with correct 3D output. But I'm wondering how I could sync a third pair of glasses in DLP 3D mode. How can it be assured that both (or even more) DLP 3D glasses are in sync concerning left/right eye triggering ? How can I make sure that the shutters of all glasses are synchronized as DLP 3D has no left/right information ? Can it happen that one pair of glasses is synchrononized correctly and another one has inverted left/right shutter behaviour ?
I don't think you can use Nvidia glasses as well as DLP link glasses side by side because they both use different technologies. I have not tried it so may be someone who has might shed some light on this.
Synchronization should not be an issue as long as you use same type of glasses and they are within the range of the synchronization signal source. Nvidia emitter can send signals to all the glasses in the IR range. Similarily DLP link glasses can send signal (a steak of white light through the projected image) to multiple glasses in range.