[quote="FSP48"][quote="Bizzy"]Came here to vent. I have the PS 3D TV and got it from a black friday sale like many of you did. I have a new GeForce GTX 750 TI card and the latest drivers but, of course, cannot get 3D to work in games. The real kicker here is that when I go to the Nvidia control panel and run the 3D test application IT SHOWS 3D GRAPHICS!!! ARRGGGGGG!!!!! It's like NVIDIA is say "Oh hey look at these 3D graphics working great. Too bad we wont let you play games that way! HAHA SUCKER!!!" So mad. It can work. I'm seeing it! WTF![/quote]
Here is the easy way to make it work. Order a Gefen HDMI Detective Plus and put it inline with the HDMI cables to the monitor and it will run as a Panasonic 3d HDTV out of the box at 720P 60Hz(per eye aka 120Hz) as you see it works in the test only to find it wont get recognized by Nvidia 3DTV Play for games etc. Very annoying but without Nvidia adding it to the whitelist like they did with the Sony HMZ-T1 Visor the PS3 3d display's EDID info is not correct as to it's true HDMI 1.4a capabilities. You can also do what I did and record the EDID info off of another Sony 3d HDTV LCD that uses shutter glasses and get full native 1080P 60Hz 2d desktop 24Hz 3d aka bluray to avoid unplugging the cheater box to get 1080 for desktop usage. The Best Buy guys let me plug into a TV and an AC outlet for the couple seconds it takes. Other than that your other option is to just buy and run DDD TriDef and use manual SBS mode which is also worth it as you get to run games at 1080P. Try to find a deal for $60 to $80 for the HDMI box to not lose too much of your display cost savings. As for overclocking the actual display above what appears to be it's true usable 60 Hz in 2d I only got it up to 66Hz which is nothing special and not worth me wasting anymore time trying at this point since I'm happy with this display for now. Hope that helps. [/quote]
Thanks! I will try the Gefen HDMI Detective Plus.
Bizzy said:Came here to vent. I have the PS 3D TV and got it from a black friday sale like many of you did. I have a new GeForce GTX 750 TI card and the latest drivers but, of course, cannot get 3D to work in games. The real kicker here is that when I go to the Nvidia control panel and run the 3D test application IT SHOWS 3D GRAPHICS!!! ARRGGGGGG!!!!! It's like NVIDIA is say "Oh hey look at these 3D graphics working great. Too bad we wont let you play games that way! HAHA SUCKER!!!" So mad. It can work. I'm seeing it! WTF!
Here is the easy way to make it work. Order a Gefen HDMI Detective Plus and put it inline with the HDMI cables to the monitor and it will run as a Panasonic 3d HDTV out of the box at 720P 60Hz(per eye aka 120Hz) as you see it works in the test only to find it wont get recognized by Nvidia 3DTV Play for games etc. Very annoying but without Nvidia adding it to the whitelist like they did with the Sony HMZ-T1 Visor the PS3 3d display's EDID info is not correct as to it's true HDMI 1.4a capabilities. You can also do what I did and record the EDID info off of another Sony 3d HDTV LCD that uses shutter glasses and get full native 1080P 60Hz 2d desktop 24Hz 3d aka bluray to avoid unplugging the cheater box to get 1080 for desktop usage. The Best Buy guys let me plug into a TV and an AC outlet for the couple seconds it takes. Other than that your other option is to just buy and run DDD TriDef and use manual SBS mode which is also worth it as you get to run games at 1080P. Try to find a deal for $60 to $80 for the HDMI box to not lose too much of your display cost savings. As for overclocking the actual display above what appears to be it's true usable 60 Hz in 2d I only got it up to 66Hz which is nothing special and not worth me wasting anymore time trying at this point since I'm happy with this display for now. Hope that helps.
For all those wondering about this issue, the monitor was officially supported back in the day of the late 100/very early 200 series drivers. However, due to the popularity of this monitor versus the popularity of nvidia's solution, they officially stopped supporting it in driver versions when the 500 series cards came out. I believe the driver version was in the 220's. It used to work well on my older desktop running GTX 460's till I updated drivers from 197.something to 22something.something (sometime in 2012). So, no support because the ps 3d monitor had it's own emitter and glasses, thus creating too much competition for their proprietary 3d hardware. I do not know it the monitor will work with any of the radeon grafx cards. Might be a good reason to look a AMD cards if they do support it now that the rx400's are out.
For all those wondering about this issue, the monitor was officially supported back in the day of the late 100/very early 200 series drivers. However, due to the popularity of this monitor versus the popularity of nvidia's solution, they officially stopped supporting it in driver versions when the 500 series cards came out. I believe the driver version was in the 220's. It used to work well on my older desktop running GTX 460's till I updated drivers from 197.something to 22something.something (sometime in 2012). So, no support because the ps 3d monitor had it's own emitter and glasses, thus creating too much competition for their proprietary 3d hardware. I do not know it the monitor will work with any of the radeon grafx cards. Might be a good reason to look a AMD cards if they do support it now that the rx400's are out.
Unfortunately, AMD cards do not work with Nvidia's stereoscopic API and only work with TriDef.
Nvidia's stereoscopic API supports way more games in 3D, thanks to patches made available by community members.
http://helixmod.blogspot.com/2013/10/game-list-automatically-updated.html
[url]http://3dsurroundgaming.com/OpenGL3DVisionGames.html#doom2016[/url]
TriDef is a great product and I'm not knocking it. In fact everyone should own it, because it can sometimes be a viable solution for stereoscopic gameplay in some games.
But due to Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, I'd never buy a Radeon GPU. Unless for a 2nd PC.
Anyhow, to get that monitor to work with Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, you just need to override the EDID with one from a HDMI compliant 3D capable display.
TriDef is a great product and I'm not knocking it. In fact everyone should own it, because it can sometimes be a viable solution for stereoscopic gameplay in some games.
But due to Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, I'd never buy a Radeon GPU. Unless for a 2nd PC.
Anyhow, to get that monitor to work with Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, you just need to override the EDID with one from a HDMI compliant 3D capable display.
Thanks! I will try the Gefen HDMI Detective Plus.
Nvidia's stereoscopic API supports way more games in 3D, thanks to patches made available by community members.
http://helixmod.blogspot.com/2013/10/game-list-automatically-updated.html
http://3dsurroundgaming.com/OpenGL3DVisionGames.html#doom2016
TriDef is a great product and I'm not knocking it. In fact everyone should own it, because it can sometimes be a viable solution for stereoscopic gameplay in some games.
But due to Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, I'd never buy a Radeon GPU. Unless for a 2nd PC.
Anyhow, to get that monitor to work with Nvidia's stereoscopic drivers, you just need to override the EDID with one from a HDMI compliant 3D capable display.