I noticed that the current buzz in TV is 3D. I also recall back when 3D was starting, the only thing that was ever mention was that it had to be 120Hz.
So what differentiates now a TV versus a 3D capable TV?
(Shopping for TV's soon, so I'm curious)
As you note, a 120Hz refresh rate is the minimum required. Note that if you get this minimum, you are getting a refresh rate of just 60Hz per eye. So if you like the smoothness of a 120Hz set in 2d, you might not be happy with a 120Hz in 3d. Set manufacturers are coming out with 240Hz sets (to enable 120Hz per eye). As always, view these things in person before buying so you know what you're getting yourself into.
So basically it sounds to me like any 120Hz panel would be 3d capable. Good to know.
No, any 3D capable panel will be at least 120Hz, but not every 120Hz tv will be 3D capable.
Explain then.
Explain then.
A 120 HZ TV without 3D support just interpolates 60 HZ video into 120 HZ. Most don't accept 120 HZ inputs, let alone any kind of 3D input.
This. The two crucial things you need are:
1. Can your TV's panel refresh at 120Hz or higher?
2. Can your TV process a signal at 120Hz or higher?
Most of the early 120/240Hz TVs could only accept a 60Hz signal (or 59 or 30 or 29, 24, etc) and interpolate frames up to 120 or 240.
Beyond that is specific handling for certain devices, HDMI 1.4, etc.
huh?
you can do 3D many ways:
frame interlacing: running at half frame rate. this causes alot of flicker but is doable. green/red glasses - yup you can do that too.
why would you run 120hz for a 24p movie?
hdmi 1.4 lets you transmit a full 1080p screen twice at the same time which older hdmi isn't capable of - so they would send half a screen at a time (left/right or up/down) to get half resolution 3dtv - honestly most people wouldn't notice the difference but both halves are being sent at one time and the screen switches it at the appropriate rate to get the best effect.
however the phosphor or GTG response time is critical with those active shutter glasses or you get nasty ghosting. I think this in itself is the most important factor with current gen.
3D with active shutter really sucks. LG has passive shutter LCD tech already. i'd wait.
read the warning label on a 3D box of active shutter glasses - its worse than a smoking warning. so much so that LG recommends against using them and they still sell them.
reminds me of the jerk - the glasses holder he invented. i suspect class-action will be coming.
i was born a poor.. (lol)
I read here the Plasma is best for 3D, but what about LED TV?
I read here the Plasma is best for 3D, but what about LED TV?
i don't think Plasma's have very good life spans though. They use more energy too i think. i have one and it gets very hot, i hear they may only last 3-5 years...i'm sure it depends. mine is 2 yrs old and doesnt look any better to me than LCD but its not 3d of course.
um no, you get your information from 10 years ago? standard lifespan of plasmas is long enough that it is non factor. You are talking 17+ years, by the time it breaks based ont he life span estimates it will be worth less than nothing. modern plasmas also use far less power than before as wel, you are about a dozen generations of plasmas out of date.
LCD has the edge over plasma in several other key areas. LCDs tend to have higher native resolution than plasmas of similar size, which means more pixels on a screen.
LCDs also tend to consume less power than plasma screens, with some of the newer "Eco" LCD panels able to use half of the power than equivalent plasmas, with the trade-off being lower brightness.
In terms of bulk, LCDs are also generally lighter than similar-sized plasmas, making it easier to move around or wall mount. This is because LCDs use plastic in their screen make-up whereas plasmas tend to use glass.
LCD pundits point to the belief that LCDs have a longer lifespan than plasma screens. This may have been true of earlier plasma models, which would lose half of their brightness after more than 20,000 hours of viewing. However, many plasmas available on the market today quote a lifespan of about 60,000 hours, which is the same as LCD. This means they will last for almost seven years
LG has new technology this year for LCD (oddly not plasma) to get rid of active shutter. trust me passive shutter is 1000000x better.
well i looked it up, but sounds like life is more like 7 yrs. not 17+. Both still have advantages and disadvantages.
http://www.cnet.com.au/plasma-vs-lcd-which-is-right-for-you-240036500.htm