How can you find out if 3D vision works for you without buying the stuff?
short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
[quote name='Gilador' post='1130866' date='Oct 14 2010, 01:23 PM']I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)[/quote]
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
[quote name='Gilador' post='1130866' date='Oct 14 2010, 01:23 PM']I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
[quote name='Gilador' post='1130866' date='Oct 14 2010, 01:23 PM']I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)[/quote]
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
[quote name='Gilador' post='1130866' date='Oct 14 2010, 01:23 PM']I am not 100% sure if this is what you'd want, but the demo of Avatar game worked fine on my Samsung UN55C8000 3D TV without any special software (3D TV Play or 3D Vision; I do not own 3D Vision). This was couple of months ago before the 260.xx beta driver was released so I was running some 25x.xx driver then.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
[quote name='travis8214' post='1130837' date='Oct 14 2010, 07:47 PM']short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.[/quote]
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
[quote name='travis8214' post='1130837' date='Oct 14 2010, 07:47 PM']short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
[quote name='travis8214' post='1130837' date='Oct 14 2010, 07:47 PM']short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.[/quote]
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
[quote name='travis8214' post='1130837' date='Oct 14 2010, 07:47 PM']short version - need to find compatibility with 3D in general but I don't really want to spend $250 just to find out
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
[quote name='Likay' post='1131552' date='Oct 15 2010, 11:29 PM']Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.[/quote]
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
[quote name='Likay' post='1131552' date='Oct 15 2010, 11:29 PM']Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
[quote name='Likay' post='1131552' date='Oct 15 2010, 11:29 PM']Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.[/quote]
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
[quote name='Likay' post='1131552' date='Oct 15 2010, 11:29 PM']Have you tried the iz3d-drivers by the way? They have an evaluation period of 30 days for all outputs except the free ones. They should work fine for your tv.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)[/quote]
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)[/quote]
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
Inside the game demo you can enable 3D and on my TV I chose the checkerboard 3D type and I was up and running in 3D. My PC's video card's HDMI output (GTX 295) was hooked directly to my TV's HDMI input.
It was pretty cool, by the way! Can hardly wait for 3DTV Play to be available so I can play other games without native 3D support on my TV.
I am sure you can still find and download the game demo.
I hope this will help :)
Did you happen to have the 3D vision hardware, though? if you didn't, then yeah that might be what I'm looking for.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.[/quote]
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.[/quote]
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
Alright, well, first off, I'm actually interested in buying the Mitsubishi 3-DA1 converter and flashing my Samsung DLP EDID so that it can use the converter. However, I have an AV receiver between the two sources and the TV, and I'm not sure if it will pass 3D or not.
I figured that the best way to find out whether or not it'd pass 3D would be to use 3D Vision. So, I hooked my my GTX460 up to the receiver (Sony HT SS2300) via HDMI and the mini-HDMI adapter that the card comes with, andhen went into 3D vision where it prompted me to install drivers that I was pretty certain I already had installed. Once it installed things I actually didn't have, namely the USB driver, the setup then prompted me to connect the emitter. Here's where the brick wall towers above me right now. I don't want to buy the emitter, because you don't really need it for the type of 3D I'm going to be using, in fact I'm not really intending to buy the 3D Vision stuff at all. What I'd be using, as mentioned, would be a 3D converter and just glasses, as the display has DLPlink or whatever it's called.
I do know that the TV works fine for 3D, Samsung HL61a750, but the thing is it needs checkerboard. 3D Vision supports that format, so I was really hoping that I could just send a 3D signal, turn 3D on on the TV, and then if and when I see double I know that the receiver supports it. But unfortunately I can't find a way to send a 3D signal out to the TV anyway than if I had the 3D Vision set.
Does anyone have any idea how I can just send a checkerboard format 3D signal out? It doesn't even have to be via 3D Vision, honestly, that was just the first thing that came to mind.
Not sure if I understood your question correctly : )
The Nvidia 3D Emitter is used to send Signals to the Glasses: The signal to TV or Monitor is send via the Cable:
You can use a monitor/TV which can support a refresh rate of 120 Hz.
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.
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.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.
Thank you, that might be what I've been looking for.
Really, all I ultimately want to do is just make sure a 3D signal will go through my AV receiver and to my TV. I don't necessarily want 3D (in the end I do, though), I just want to make sure I can get it.