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Best 3D Blu-ray Deals
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#21 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Very sorry for the health of your mom, i wish her the best and a good recovery. All the best for you too. ![]() Last edited by Jlardonio; 05-19-2022 at 11:40 PM. |
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#22 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
Aug 2021
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For example, I needed a Full HD 3D projector that I could travel with, and after a few weeks casually looking on eBay I landed one for under $200. In the $300 to $400 range you could likely buy it now, since factory refurbs seem to be from $350 to $500, which puts a relatively solid price ceiling onto used projectors With some patience, 2 Full HD 3D projectors and a polarized screen could be done for around $1,000, more if you buy a rig to align them. That's a somewhat serious sum, though it is about twice what Sony sold that PS 3D TV for, which Linus considered to be terrible, and it is 1/16th of what he said his cream of the crop 3D TV retailed for. Quote:
Natural light, and even artificial light, aren't dealbreakers with 3D on a projector. They wash the image out, of course, but the tech can still work with some of them present. Although IMHO a movie should be watched in an environment with minimum light. My active 3D glasses have gone through many episodes and films on a single charge. I did have a pair run out of power the other week during a film, but swapping in a spare pair only took a few seconds. At $12 to $20+ a piece, active glasses are significantly more expensive than passive glasses. For a movie theater that has thousands of patrons that matters, but for a home audience I'm not sure it does. Anyone who can afford passive 3D projection can afford dozens of active 3D glasses. It seems to me that 3DTV owners don't need to buy that many glasses as only a few people can watch a 3DTV at the same time. Quote:
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Thanks given by: | Joe D. (05-20-2022), trialobite (05-20-2022) |
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#23 | |
Senior Member
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Last edited by trialobite; 05-20-2022 at 06:12 AM. |
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#24 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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I have 16 pair of glasses and i just paid for 1 pair, the rest was LG offers with the TV and a pair that the theater offered me. Even if i needed more it would be inexpensive and easy to get. And they would have just to put them on and watch, that really simple move. Quote:
Like i said. People need standardization on 3D and passive 3D is a game winner. Maybe one day we'll have the autostereoscopic TV/projection to replace the glasses but until then the passive 3D is the most successful way to watch 3D for most of the consumers if we want the format to survive. |
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#25 | ||
Power Member
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The best way to avoid issue #2 on DLP projectors is to use RF glasses instead of DLP-Link. |
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#26 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
Aug 2021
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For the glasses that have the Invert button on them, my experience has been that folks like to have fun clicking it. I know I have fun with it myself sometimes, as it can, particularly with at-home 3D conversions, have interesting effects. Regarding light reflection, in DLP link mode the projector sets itself to a very bright output, which would cause reflection issues except the active glasses greatly eliminate it. They also enhance the contrast of the image. There's also a strong immunity to ghosting ![]() On the glasses themselves, 16 pairs of active glasses would be an expense for sure. While they can be had cheaper elsewhere, glancing at US Amazon shows that it would cost between $180 and $292. Despite their increased weight, I am told by my prescription-glasses-wearing pals that wearing active glasses over their normal glasses is more comfortable than wearing the passive RealD glasses over their normal glasses. The RealD glasses have small lenses, thick frames, and are not ergonomic. In the past you've mentioned clip-on passive glasses, which would be more comfortable than active, but wearing two pairs of glasses does not seem to be an issue. Quote:
When my glasses have lost sync, due to scenes being too dark on a screen that might not be reflective enough, I still have not noticed ghosting, just a mild color shifting and the image turning flat. ![]() |
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