Yes and no.
It does not work when using Monitors/TVs because of the polarizing film that is placed over the top of them.
(not to be confused with the Film Pattern Retarder placed on Passive Monitors)
However, you can use projectors in portrait mode. It's recommended that you position them so that the heat exhaust is on the top side and not the bottom, if possible.
It does not work when using Monitors/TVs because of the polarizing film that is placed over the top of them.
(not to be confused with the Film Pattern Retarder placed on Passive Monitors)
However, you can use projectors in portrait mode. It's recommended that you position them so that the heat exhaust is on the top side and not the bottom, if possible.
The TV/monitor polarization issue can be resolved by swapping (reversing) left and right eye pieces in the active glasses. I was never able to fix the asynchronous active glasses shutter sync among the 3 screens, when I implemented a portrait setup using AMD's Catalyst and TriDef's Ignition years ago, however. TVs/monitors with a small/narrow bezel width are very important with portrait setups, since the bezel gap space is more apparent in your vision field.
The TV/monitor polarization issue can be resolved by swapping (reversing) left and right eye pieces in the active glasses. I was never able to fix the asynchronous active glasses shutter sync among the 3 screens, when I implemented a portrait setup using AMD's Catalyst and TriDef's Ignition years ago, however. TVs/monitors with a small/narrow bezel width are very important with portrait setups, since the bezel gap space is more apparent in your vision field.
Intel i5 7600K @ 4.8ghz / MSI Z270 SLI / Asus 1080GTX - 416.16 / Optoma HD142x Projector / 1 4'x10' Curved Screen PVC / TrackIR / HOTAS Cougar / Cougar MFD's / Track IR / NVidia 3D Vision / Win 10 64bit
It does not work when using Monitors/TVs because of the polarizing film that is placed over the top of them.
(not to be confused with the Film Pattern Retarder placed on Passive Monitors)
However, you can use projectors in portrait mode. It's recommended that you position them so that the heat exhaust is on the top side and not the bottom, if possible.