Unless you have a very special TV, it will not accept an input of over 60hz. The only difference between a normal TV and a special 3D one is every 3D monitor in production accepts a video input of over 100fps.
Since the TV needs to display one frame to each eye it effectively cuts the frame rate in half. I am not sure how well the brain handles 3d simulation at 30fps and its very possible the effect could be lost. Either way, if you plan to game with it, it will be very choppy.
I did a quick Wikipedia search of 3D movie theaters and it seems they just still display a 24hz to each eye, needing only a 48hz capable display. This may prove my upper statement wrong as the effect may still work with such low refresh rates. I didn't really do that much research so its possible they could show the same frame multiple alternating times to each eye at a higher refresh rate. Now that I think about it I'm pretty sure thats what happens, but like I said I really didn't do that much research.