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Post by Ryan on Dec 24, 2013 9:05:56 GMT -8
I have both a 3D TV and just got set up with a 3D projector in my new man cave. I'm finding that not all 3D movies work well on the projector. These are the real 3D made movies. I have a floor to ceiling 130" wide X 74" tall screen (150" diagonal). For sound, I have 5.1 surround sound with the 3 front, left, right and center speakers behind the screen, woofer in the back with the projector. As of now, the movies, Ice Age - Continental Drift and The Hobbit are very hard to watch in 3D. Anything that moves fast appears blurred like under water or heat waved...ghosted. When I pause the movie when things are moving fast and I close one eye back and forth, the left eye is one frame ahead of the right making the fast moving objects on top or inside each other. As far as I can tell the movie image sinc is off by one frame so the one eye is always one frame ahead of the right eye. Everything is fine when things are standing still or moving slow but fast stuff is all blahblah visually. I couldn't find any sinc video adjustment on the projector or the player. Now Jack the Giant Slayer is perfectly fine to watch with the projector in my mini-max home theater, no problems at all and everything looks good. I was wondering if anyone here had a 3D projector or had this problem of frame out of sinc with right and left eye.
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mukhi
New Member
Posts: 45
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Post by mukhi on Dec 25, 2013 2:04:22 GMT -8
well, this should not happen as movie theaters use projector/screen indeed. did you talk to your projector seller (if it is local store, definitely, you want to!).
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Post by Phil @ RealOrFake3D on Jan 6, 2014 7:35:15 GMT -8
Side question, is your 3D projector using passive or active 3D? Passive uses polarized lenses and active uses the shutter glasses.
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Post by fRAN on Aug 19, 2014 6:33:26 GMT -8
I have the same problem with an Espson TW6000 and with the movies in format HOU. The still of the right eye goes behind the right, this does not happen when the material is HSBS. It is a problem of the projector that is not capable of processing two images at sufficient speed
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ab
New Member
Posts: 9
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Post by ab on Nov 6, 2014 6:35:40 GMT -8
First thing to check with any display problem is how the two eyes look separately. Watch with just one eye and look for double images (bleed from the other eye view) and discontinuities (eye switches). The first can be caused by persistence problems as well as active switching (or passive cancellation) issues. The latter happens if things work but fall out of sync. (They can both happen, but the former is so much more noticeable it'll drown the latter out.)
I'd watch for a significant time with each eye and then with both and try to figure where the problem is.
I'm still holding out for an integrated Omega 3D implementation for my next projector setup, but I'm not holding my breath.
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