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I took a Sega scope 3D image play on my CRT TV and simultaneously pumped it into a TN monitor with one millisecond delay.
The filter on the Sega scope glasses blacked out the screen completely until I rotated the camera 90° which was filming the TN display. Then the TN display was perfectly clear normal though the 3D perspective was off because it assumes a creature of vertically stacked eyes not horizontally spread eyes. Is this TV filter which filters light in one direction common on all LCD and led and OLED screens? Or does it differ from brand to brand or does it differ from model to model? If all TVs are fundamentally the same in terms of penetrating the LCD shutter on the Sega Master System then my theory of a universal add-on shutter system should work if you either have a very low ping time or compensate for higher paying times by sinking the glasses with the output of the TV not with the input of the signal into the machine. I just want to know if I go into a Best Buy or Walmart and I tried this experiment with a Sega Master System video games system and assuming I'm using all sorts o of monitors and this very low ping component to HDMI converter known as the RetroTink wx M Pro then those with similar ping times should get the similar results, however the whole field of random TVs we'll have some working and some not depending on the ping time of the individual model. My main question is is there polarization in all forms of modern TV and if so are they universally polarized to be 90° opposite of whatever the Sega scope is? If so then we have all the components to make a universal shutter base adapter except for the timing aspect of the alternate frames. I understand polarized TVs that are made for 3D have either alternate rows columns or pixels both vertically and horizontally in a checkerboard fashion 90° apart in polarization so that when one is on the other is off. Which is the cheapest way to do it if one already has polarization but if a TV screen does not have 3D polarization then this would be the cheapest way to add it. I think I found another step towards the invention of the universal shutter 3D add-on adapter for modern TVs. The main reason why I'm putting it in this category and not in the 3D category is I want to know if the the nature of modern TVs from the 90s onward. It'll definitely work with a CRT but the question is will it work with all the other older technologies to add 3D. I don't know who uses plasma anymore. But would it work with plasma. I assume all the other technologies have a polarized filter. |
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