Should I be able to see the day light flicker outside?
I have white blinds(daylight shines through them) behind my monitor which flicker really badly whilst looking at them through the glasses with settings at 120hz...
I've gave them to a few people and they all notice this flicker(really obvious).
Should we be able to see this or is there perhaps something wrong?
I have white blinds(daylight shines through them) behind my monitor which flicker really badly whilst looking at them through the glasses with settings at 120hz...
I've gave them to a few people and they all notice this flicker(really obvious).
Should we be able to see this or is there perhaps something wrong?
CPU: I7 4790k@ 4.6ghz
GPU: SLI x2 970 GTX Twin Frozr V MSI
RAM: 16gb 1600mhz ddr3 corsair vengence ram
Monitor: X34 Acer pred 34" 3440x1440
Motherboard: Gigabyte g.1 sniper 5 four-way sli board
+Lanboard :)
SSD: (main drives) Vertex4 (sata3) x2 in 0 raid config. (900mbs sequential read)
HDD: Sata2 Velociraptorx2 in a Sata 0 Raid, western 200gb storage drive, 2tb external hard drive. 6TB Black WD Steam Library Drive
DVD drive: Samsung writemaster
Mouse mat: Razer Destruct(Ant)r, 2x MSI Frozer mouse mats
Mouse: Razer Naga
Keyboard: Corsair K90
Headphones: Razer Megalodon 7.1 surround.
1200 Antec two hundred gamers case.
Windows 10 Home
150mb Virgin internet
Dogs: Basil (2.5 year old Staffy) + Frankie? (Puppy Dobbermen)
Cats: Neeko (ragdoll), Moppit, Milo(moggies)
"The frequency of visible light is referred to as color, and ranges from 430 trillion Hz, seen as red, to 750 trillion Hz, seen as violet. Again, the full range of frequencies extends beyond the visible spectrum, from less than one billion Hz, as in radio waves, to greater than 3 billion billion Hz, as in gamma rays."
Taken from this link: [url="http://science.howstuffworks.com/light3.htm"]http://science.howstuffworks.com/light3.htm[/url]
"The frequency of visible light is referred to as color, and ranges from 430 trillion Hz, seen as red, to 750 trillion Hz, seen as violet. Again, the full range of frequencies extends beyond the visible spectrum, from less than one billion Hz, as in radio waves, to greater than 3 billion billion Hz, as in gamma rays."
Yes it's normal that you see daylight flickering at 120Hz. The human eye flicker perception limit varies significantly according to the amount of light your eyes recieve.
The amount of light you get from the sun, even though blinds, in an order of magnitude higher to what an LCD display can produce.
If you want to suppress the flicker effect, you have to play in much darker conditions.
Yes it's normal that you see daylight flickering at 120Hz. The human eye flicker perception limit varies significantly according to the amount of light your eyes recieve.
The amount of light you get from the sun, even though blinds, in an order of magnitude higher to what an LCD display can produce.
If you want to suppress the flicker effect, you have to play in much darker conditions.
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've gave them to a few people and they all notice this flicker(really obvious).
Should we be able to see this or is there perhaps something wrong?
I've gave them to a few people and they all notice this flicker(really obvious).
Should we be able to see this or is there perhaps something wrong?
CPU: I7 4790k@ 4.6ghz
GPU: SLI x2 970 GTX Twin Frozr V MSI
RAM: 16gb 1600mhz ddr3 corsair vengence ram
Monitor: X34 Acer pred 34" 3440x1440
Motherboard: Gigabyte g.1 sniper 5 four-way sli board
+Lanboard :)
SSD: (main drives) Vertex4 (sata3) x2 in 0 raid config. (900mbs sequential read)
HDD: Sata2 Velociraptorx2 in a Sata 0 Raid, western 200gb storage drive, 2tb external hard drive. 6TB Black WD Steam Library Drive
DVD drive: Samsung writemaster
Mouse mat: Razer Destruct(Ant)r, 2x MSI Frozer mouse mats
Mouse: Razer Naga
Keyboard: Corsair K90
Headphones: Razer Megalodon 7.1 surround.
1200 Antec two hundred gamers case.
Windows 10 Home
150mb Virgin internet
Dogs: Basil (2.5 year old Staffy) + Frankie? (Puppy Dobbermen)
Cats: Neeko (ragdoll), Moppit, Milo(moggies)
Not sure what frequency the sun is at :~) but its more noticeable than any of the electric lights in my room.
Not sure what frequency the sun is at :~) but its more noticeable than any of the electric lights in my room.
Taken from this link: [url="http://science.howstuffworks.com/light3.htm"]http://science.howstuffworks.com/light3.htm[/url]
Taken from this link: http://science.howstuffworks.com/light3.htm
Yes it's normal that you see daylight flickering at 120Hz. The human eye flicker perception limit varies significantly according to the amount of light your eyes recieve.
The amount of light you get from the sun, even though blinds, in an order of magnitude higher to what an LCD display can produce.
If you want to suppress the flicker effect, you have to play in much darker conditions.
Yes it's normal that you see daylight flickering at 120Hz. The human eye flicker perception limit varies significantly according to the amount of light your eyes recieve.
The amount of light you get from the sun, even though blinds, in an order of magnitude higher to what an LCD display can produce.
If you want to suppress the flicker effect, you have to play in much darker conditions.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter