Ok, so before you go off saying "check the can you run it website" , I have, and it says my Tv fails. But it also uses the bases for passing on the Tvs listed on the nvidia page showing compatible tvs. I'm assuming they haven't tested ALL tv's out there, and the quick picture diagram just shows a 120hz tv for requirement.
I have this tv: [url="http://www.lge.com/us/tv-audio-video/televisions/LG-lcd-tv-32LH40.jsp"]http://www.lge.com/us/tv-audio-video/telev...d-tv-32LH40.jsp[/url]
and if for some reason the link doesn't work, it is the LG 32LH40 model.
it's 120hz, 2.7ms response time, 70,000:1 contrast ratio
Will it work with 3Dvision? (I have a Geforce gtx 285 2gb video card btw)
Ok, so before you go off saying "check the can you run it website" , I have, and it says my Tv fails. But it also uses the bases for passing on the Tvs listed on the nvidia page showing compatible tvs. I'm assuming they haven't tested ALL tv's out there, and the quick picture diagram just shows a 120hz tv for requirement.
No, that tv will take a 60hz input and render each frame twice in quick succession to effectively achieve 120hz albeit false. this guy explains it best my friend, alot of people are confused by the specs on tv sets
No, that tv will take a 60hz input and render each frame twice in quick succession to effectively achieve 120hz albeit false. this guy explains it best my friend, alot of people are confused by the specs on tv sets
Sorry.
Your TV only has 60Hz input which it then interpolates up to 120Hz.
3D vision requires either a true 120Hz display with 120Hz input and constant input lag, or a 60Hz input display with special chips designed to understand Texas Instrument DLP3D formats.
Your TV is equipped with neither of these and is not compatible.
Your TV only has 60Hz input which it then interpolates up to 120Hz.
3D vision requires either a true 120Hz display with 120Hz input and constant input lag, or a 60Hz input display with special chips designed to understand Texas Instrument DLP3D formats.
Your TV is equipped with neither of these and is not compatible.
There is nothing you can do about it.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
I have this tv: [url="http://www.lge.com/us/tv-audio-video/televisions/LG-lcd-tv-32LH40.jsp"]http://www.lge.com/us/tv-audio-video/telev...d-tv-32LH40.jsp[/url]
and if for some reason the link doesn't work, it is the LG 32LH40 model.
it's 120hz, 2.7ms response time, 70,000:1 contrast ratio
Will it work with 3Dvision? (I have a Geforce gtx 285 2gb video card btw)
thanks in advance
I have this tv: http://www.lge.com/us/tv-audio-video/telev...d-tv-32LH40.jsp
and if for some reason the link doesn't work, it is the LG 32LH40 model.
it's 120hz, 2.7ms response time, 70,000:1 contrast ratio
Will it work with 3Dvision? (I have a Geforce gtx 285 2gb video card btw)
thanks in advance
[url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=153997"]http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=153997[/url]
http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=153997
thanks for the info
thanks for the info
Your TV only has 60Hz input which it then interpolates up to 120Hz.
3D vision requires either a true 120Hz display with 120Hz input and constant input lag, or a 60Hz input display with special chips designed to understand Texas Instrument DLP3D formats.
Your TV is equipped with neither of these and is not compatible.
There is nothing you can do about it.
Your TV only has 60Hz input which it then interpolates up to 120Hz.
3D vision requires either a true 120Hz display with 120Hz input and constant input lag, or a 60Hz input display with special chips designed to understand Texas Instrument DLP3D formats.
Your TV is equipped with neither of these and is not compatible.
There is nothing you can do about it.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter