DIY Planer 3-D stereo compatible LCD monitors?
I'm hoping there is a list of the above type of monitors that one of you guys knows where to find or if not a list or how do I asked the question to the technical department of the LCD monitor manufacturers, what do I asked them regarding their polarity compatible for the Planer setup?

Thanks
I'm hoping there is a list of the above type of monitors that one of you guys knows where to find or if not a list or how do I asked the question to the technical department of the LCD monitor manufacturers, what do I asked them regarding their polarity compatible for the Planer setup?



Thanks

MSI® MEG Creation X399 Socket TR4
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Thermaltake® CA-1H1-00F1WN-00 Tower 900 E-ATX Case with Tempered Glass Sides - Black
CyberPower® CP1500EPFCLCD-UK Backup UPS PFC Pure Sinewave 1500VA/900W
MONITOR:
LG® OLED55C6V 55" 4K TV, HDCP 2.2, HDMI 2.0a, 12-bit panel - Asus 27” VG278H 3D Vision Monitor - Phillips 27” 272G5 3D Monitor

#1
Posted 01/26/2008 09:54 PM   
I was thinking about making a planar for a short while. Decided for another solution though. But here's a tip i got from someone (sorry, but i don't remember who. :( ): Take a pair of polarized glasses to a store and check the polarization on the monitors there. When you have a compatible one, one eye should be blacked out. The semitransparent mirror and function of the rig takes care of the rest so you can easily get two of that monitor. If you already have two "incompatible" ones you can use an extra polarisation foil to "turn" the polarization from the monitor 45°. You have to do this with both monitors. If you also add a quarterwave retarder between the monitor and the extra polarizer you will not loose so much light. (check polarization.com for retarders/polarizers).

ps: A bit insecure. You can try turning your head 45° and see if you have the right effect. In that case you maybe could make your own glasses with polarizers. :P

cheers
I was thinking about making a planar for a short while. Decided for another solution though. But here's a tip i got from someone (sorry, but i don't remember who. :( ): Take a pair of polarized glasses to a store and check the polarization on the monitors there. When you have a compatible one, one eye should be blacked out. The semitransparent mirror and function of the rig takes care of the rest so you can easily get two of that monitor. If you already have two "incompatible" ones you can use an extra polarisation foil to "turn" the polarization from the monitor 45°. You have to do this with both monitors. If you also add a quarterwave retarder between the monitor and the extra polarizer you will not loose so much light. (check polarization.com for retarders/polarizers).



ps: A bit insecure. You can try turning your head 45° and see if you have the right effect. In that case you maybe could make your own glasses with polarizers. :P



cheers

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Mb: Asus P5W DH Deluxe

Cpu: C2D E6600

Gb: Nvidia 7900GT + 8800GTX

3D:100" passive projector polarized setup + 22" IZ3D

Stereodrivers: Iz3d & Tridef ignition and nvidia old school.

#2
Posted 01/26/2008 10:16 PM   
Oops duplicate reply sorry, is there a way of removing this reply Moderator?
Oops duplicate reply sorry, is there a way of removing this reply Moderator?

MSI® MEG Creation X399 Socket TR4
AMD® 2950x TR4 ThreadRipper
Corsair® CMK32GX4M4B3200C16 Vengeance LPX 32 GB (4 x 8 GB) DDR4 3200 MHz
ADATA® ASX8200NP-480GT-C 480 GB M.2 2280 SSD
EVGA® GeForce GTX 1080 Ti FTW 3
Corsair® AX1600i Digital 80 PLUS TITANIUM
Corsair® H100i Hydro PRO RGB Liquid CPU Cooler
Thermaltake® CA-1H1-00F1WN-00 Tower 900 E-ATX Case with Tempered Glass Sides - Black
CyberPower® CP1500EPFCLCD-UK Backup UPS PFC Pure Sinewave 1500VA/900W
MONITOR:
LG® OLED55C6V 55" 4K TV, HDCP 2.2, HDMI 2.0a, 12-bit panel - Asus 27” VG278H 3D Vision Monitor - Phillips 27” 272G5 3D Monitor

#3
Posted 01/30/2008 03:05 PM   
[quote name='Likay' date='Jan 26 2008, 10:16 PM']I was thinking about making a planar for a short while. Decided for another solution though. But here's a tip i got from someone (sorry, but i don't remember who.  :(  ): Take a pair of polarized glasses to a store and check the polarization on the monitors there. When you have a compatible one, one eye should be blacked out. The semitransparent mirror and function of the rig takes care of the rest so you can easily get two of that monitor. If you already have two "incompatible" ones you can use an extra polarisation foil to "turn" the polarization from the monitor 45°. You have to do this with both monitors. If you also add a quarterwave retarder between the monitor and the extra polarizer you will not loose so much light. (check polarization.com for retarders/polarizers).

ps: A bit insecure. You can try turning your head 45° and see if you have the right effect. In that case you maybe could make your own glasses with polarizers.  :P

cheers
[right][snapback]315302[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]

Problem solved :-) were very kind chap who posted a DIY 3-D planar project called the TARDIS in the UK sent me a pair of cardboard glasses which i was able to use on both monitors to confirm that they are 45° polarisation, that is to say that in either direction of left and right one of the lenses turns black at 45°. I take it this means that I have to order a pair of 45/135° instead of the usual 0/90° glasses?

Anyway thanks to your suggestion and may I just say that a great avatar if you made it yourself :-)

Cheers
[quote name='Likay' date='Jan 26 2008, 10:16 PM']I was thinking about making a planar for a short while. Decided for another solution though. But here's a tip i got from someone (sorry, but i don't remember who.  :(  ): Take a pair of polarized glasses to a store and check the polarization on the monitors there. When you have a compatible one, one eye should be blacked out. The semitransparent mirror and function of the rig takes care of the rest so you can easily get two of that monitor. If you already have two "incompatible" ones you can use an extra polarisation foil to "turn" the polarization from the monitor 45°. You have to do this with both monitors. If you also add a quarterwave retarder between the monitor and the extra polarizer you will not loose so much light. (check polarization.com for retarders/polarizers).



ps: A bit insecure. You can try turning your head 45° and see if you have the right effect. In that case you maybe could make your own glasses with polarizers.  :P



cheers

[snapback]315302[/snapback]






Problem solved :-) were very kind chap who posted a DIY 3-D planar project called the TARDIS in the UK sent me a pair of cardboard glasses which i was able to use on both monitors to confirm that they are 45° polarisation, that is to say that in either direction of left and right one of the lenses turns black at 45°. I take it this means that I have to order a pair of 45/135° instead of the usual 0/90° glasses?



Anyway thanks to your suggestion and may I just say that a great avatar if you made it yourself :-)



Cheers

MSI® MEG Creation X399 Socket TR4
AMD® 2950x TR4 ThreadRipper
Corsair® CMK32GX4M4B3200C16 Vengeance LPX 32 GB (4 x 8 GB) DDR4 3200 MHz
ADATA® ASX8200NP-480GT-C 480 GB M.2 2280 SSD
EVGA® GeForce GTX 1080 Ti FTW 3
Corsair® AX1600i Digital 80 PLUS TITANIUM
Corsair® H100i Hydro PRO RGB Liquid CPU Cooler
Thermaltake® CA-1H1-00F1WN-00 Tower 900 E-ATX Case with Tempered Glass Sides - Black
CyberPower® CP1500EPFCLCD-UK Backup UPS PFC Pure Sinewave 1500VA/900W
MONITOR:
LG® OLED55C6V 55" 4K TV, HDCP 2.2, HDMI 2.0a, 12-bit panel - Asus 27” VG278H 3D Vision Monitor - Phillips 27” 272G5 3D Monitor

#4
Posted 01/30/2008 03:07 PM   
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