I have a problem. I just got these glasses and they are really cool, but i just noticed a slight double image when I was playing. If i look with 1 eye, I can see the 2nd image very slightly, but noticable enough to to bother me. What can I do to fix this? Thanks!
EDIT: ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
I have a problem. I just got these glasses and they are really cool, but i just noticed a slight double image when I was playing. If i look with 1 eye, I can see the 2nd image very slightly, but noticable enough to to bother me. What can I do to fix this? Thanks!
EDIT: ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
Hi, the phenomenon you are experiencing is called "ghosting", or to be more technically precise : "stereo video crosstalk", but most people just say "ghosting".
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). It happens when the 3d display technology is unable to perfectly separate the views for each eye without letting the wrong image through the glasses. All 3D displays have the issue (even cinema systems), some display systems tend to ghost more than others because of their design. There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
As a work-around all you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.
Hi, the phenomenon you are experiencing is called "ghosting", or to be more technically precise : "stereo video crosstalk", but most people just say "ghosting".
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). It happens when the 3d display technology is unable to perfectly separate the views for each eye without letting the wrong image through the glasses. All 3D displays have the issue (even cinema systems), some display systems tend to ghost more than others because of their design. There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
As a work-around all you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's 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
[quote name='BlackSharkfr' post='991710' date='Jan 29 2010, 03:30 PM']Hi, the phenomenon you are experiencing is called "ghosting", or to be more technically precise : "stereo video crosstalk", but most people just say "ghosting".
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
All you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.[/quote]
well dang, i never read about that being a problem, oh well, its still cool
[quote name='BlackSharkfr' post='991710' date='Jan 29 2010, 03:30 PM']Hi, the phenomenon you are experiencing is called "ghosting", or to be more technically precise : "stereo video crosstalk", but most people just say "ghosting".
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
All you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.
well dang, i never read about that being a problem, oh well, its still cool
ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
EDIT: ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
What setting may help it become better?
EDIT: ok, so i've been trying to mess with the settings and i'm doing nothing but bad, the ghosting is even worse. I've also noticed that objects near the top of the screen have more of a solid ghosting than the middle. this is really taking away from the cool 3d experience.
What setting may help it become better?
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). It happens when the 3d display technology is unable to perfectly separate the views for each eye without letting the wrong image through the glasses. All 3D displays have the issue (even cinema systems), some display systems tend to ghost more than others because of their design. There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
As a work-around all you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). It happens when the 3d display technology is unable to perfectly separate the views for each eye without letting the wrong image through the glasses. All 3D displays have the issue (even cinema systems), some display systems tend to ghost more than others because of their design. There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
As a work-around all you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's 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
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
All you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.[/quote]
well dang, i never read about that being a problem, oh well, its still cool
The amount of ghosting depends on the quality of the 3D display solution (screen + glasses technology). There is no magic fix, and is normal when the 3D display technology isn't absolutely perfect (unless you encounter a big glitch that produces massive ghosting that prevents you from seeing the 3d picture, then that is not normal).
You cannot suppress it unless you change of 3D display technology (screen or glasses or both).
All you can do is try to change your brightness/contrast/gamma settings and convergence settings to hide the most visible objects. But that's about it.
well dang, i never read about that being a problem, oh well, its still cool
What setting may help it become better?
What setting may help it become better?