I seem to be getting a ghosting effect on my 3D Vision. The left image will be overlayed on the right image with a high transparency, and the right image will be overlayed on the left image with a high transparency, and it is visible at all times when using 3D Vision. The effect looks a lot like the attached concept image (the left eye image). The effect is visible the most around bright highlighted areas such as around this character's ear.
I've got the ViewSonic 120Hz 1080p LED monitor with 3D Vision (model P854) glasses. I can clearly see the 3D effect, but the ghosting is incredibly jarring. Is there anything I can do to calibrate the glasses, monitor, or GPU to get ride of this issue?
I seem to be getting a ghosting effect on my 3D Vision. The left image will be overlayed on the right image with a high transparency, and the right image will be overlayed on the left image with a high transparency, and it is visible at all times when using 3D Vision. The effect looks a lot like the attached concept image (the left eye image). The effect is visible the most around bright highlighted areas such as around this character's ear.
I've got the ViewSonic 120Hz 1080p LED monitor with 3D Vision (model P854) glasses. I can clearly see the 3D effect, but the ghosting is incredibly jarring. Is there anything I can do to calibrate the glasses, monitor, or GPU to get ride of this issue?
I don't remember model numbers all that well but is this the model that has been around for a few years? If so then, yeah, you're mostly stuck with it. The only "cures" are to either lower contrast (which makes the ghosts harder to see) or to lower the refresh rate of the monitor to 100Hz.
Do make sure that your glasses are all charged up and that nothing is obstructing the line of site between your glasses and the emitter.
I don't remember model numbers all that well but is this the model that has been around for a few years? If so then, yeah, you're mostly stuck with it. The only "cures" are to either lower contrast (which makes the ghosts harder to see) or to lower the refresh rate of the monitor to 100Hz.
Do make sure that your glasses are all charged up and that nothing is obstructing the line of site between your glasses and the emitter.
I've got the ViewSonic 120Hz 1080p LED monitor with 3D Vision (model P854) glasses. I can clearly see the 3D effect, but the ghosting is incredibly jarring. Is there anything I can do to calibrate the glasses, monitor, or GPU to get ride of this issue?
I've got the ViewSonic 120Hz 1080p LED monitor with 3D Vision (model P854) glasses. I can clearly see the 3D effect, but the ghosting is incredibly jarring. Is there anything I can do to calibrate the glasses, monitor, or GPU to get ride of this issue?
Do make sure that your glasses are all charged up and that nothing is obstructing the line of site between your glasses and the emitter.
Do make sure that your glasses are all charged up and that nothing is obstructing the line of site between your glasses and the emitter.