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3D SBS Demo 1080p Or 1080i: Learn How to Remove Festival Bracelets in 3D



In addition to Blu-ray 3D, the VP3D1 also supports side-by-side 3D as you get with some cable and satellite boxes. If you tune into 3D programming and see two identical images, left and right, hit the "Side by Side" button on the front of the unit. Oh and make sure your set-top box is set to 1080i output if it is not already.


In day to day operation, the VP3D1 works as expected. I hit it with several Blu-ray 3D titles during the review period and it had no problems creating a deep believable sense of space on good 3D content. One of my favorite scenes to demo in 3D is the cryo sleep awakening scene in Avatar on Blu-ray 3D. When Jake awakens from his five year slumber and his sleep capsule slides out, the ship seems to extend back into my neighbor's basement, and then past that into their neighbor's basement. They haven't called to complain yet though, so I'm thinking it's just a really good illusion. The final battle scene is also fun to watch as the natives and their beasts collide with evil humans and their advanced technology. You feel as if you're right there in the jungle, or in the shuttlecraft, or in the air on the back of a Banshee. It's as good as the 3D experience in many theaters, and better than some.




3d Sbs Demo 1080p Or 1080i



When you find yourself fresh out of 3D content, or you just need a break from the glasses, you don't need to do anything special to go back to viewing regular 2D material. The VP3D1 will automatically detect that the content you are watching is not 3D and it will switch itself into a passthrough mode that maintains the resolution of the source. This means that Blu-ray Discs will be passed through to the projector in full 1080p resolution. Of course, virtually all of the 3D-ready projectors on the market right now are 720p projectors, so the projector is just going to scale the image back down to its native resolution. But it is nice that the converter box does the switching to 2D mode automatically so you don't have to.


We have drawn some comparisons here between ViewSonic's VP3D1 and Optoma's similar 3D-XL adapter. As far as using these devices with a 3D-ready 720p DLP projector, the two units are functionally identical. However, the Optoma box also supports a 1080p 3D mode which is not offered on the ViewSonic. With this mode, you actually need a second 3D-XL box as well as a second projector. One box handles the left eye signal, one the right eye. The dual projectors each have polarization filters to differentiate the left and right eye images from each other. The projectors shoot these images at a specially formulated silver screen that can handle the polarized light output and then you use passive polarized 3D glasses to view the image in 3D.


A couple of points, if your polarised 3D interlaced screen of your pinball cab is 1080p you should run it at native res or else the "every other line" interlaced method of 3D wont line up.I had a thought also, are you rotating the screen clockwise or anticlockwise, ie; is your brand logo at the left of the cab or right. I wonder if this may be an oversite of the interlaced 3D method inbuilt into VPX, perhaps it only works correctly when rotated clockwise (screen brand logo/base to left)? (although it works swapped eyes with latest build, I wonder if this may have been the previous issue?)Don't assume that your screen is automatically mapping to 1:1 , you may need to enable this function in your screen menu. Suggest checking to see if any of your windows taskbar is cut off, it may only be by a few pixels, but enough to throw out the interlaced 3D effect. What method of 3D does your living room 4K tv use? Shutter glasses or polarised?


First to answer Gravy's questions. My setup is in desktop mode. I don't have a cabinet. I have a self contained "console" based on an Atari Arcade fighting stick, modified with side buttons for pinball paddles. It has an Intel NUC6i5SYK built inside it and I use it with one of 2 monitors, either a 32" Vizio E3D320VX or a 65" LG OLED65E6. Both are 3D Passive/polarized monitors. The Vizio is 1080p, the LG is 4K


I had seen something similar when I was running 1080p with 125% scaling, so I set the scaling back to 100% (really tiny icons and text at 4K native). When I started the table, it rendered in a small window in the center of screen, with the VPX Editor window full screen in the background. It looks like the pinball render window was scaled at 1920x1080, and there was no way to make it go full screen. I rebooted the PC, and restarted the table this time it did the same thing, except the table render screen was in the lower right hand corner. I couldn't figure out why until I went back to the video preference, it showed that my screen was something like 5640 x 2160. I don't remember the actual resolution but it was like double wide. Not exactly double 4K, but something like 1.5 wider. Why that is, I have no idea. Suffice it to say, I could not get this thing to run properly at 4K.


I then set the desktop to 1080p, and had to reboot the system before VPX would recognize the resolution. Once I did, everything worked correctly in 2D. But 3D mode was a no go, in Interlaced 3D, you see the same interlaced image with both eyes, there is no 3D effect. The system behaves exactly as I mentioned in my previous post. I did set it to SBS, and then turned 3D on in the TV and that worked just fine, but that wonderful 4K 3D was not to be..


Might seem like an obvious question, but are you actually making the resolution change to 4K in the VPX menu preferences/video/graphics option/display and not just in windows display settings?Edit: I wonder if the NUK615 is actually just a bit hobbled in that perhaps it will do 4K for desktop but not for games and it somehow just falls back to 1080p windowed? Maybe try a 4k 30hz mode and see if that makes any difference.Possibly related issue and chatter at -nuc6i5.222518/


As most of you probably know, 3D movies are only 1080p, and on a passive screen like the LG, each eye only gets half the vertical resolution, so in a sense you might say that each eye sees a 1920 x 540 image. Sure your brain puts it all together as a single image, but this was my first opportunity to see what 4K 3D would be like. Each eye gets a 3840 x 1080 image, and the whole 3D image is just awesome. I only wish that movie studios would release 4K 3D movies. I mean they're still releasing 3D Movies in blue ray, why not do 4K movies in 3D for those that can still enjoy them.


Also you said "I see a lot of people that still have 46" 1080i/1080p TVs" Are you referring to companies selling new 3D TVs? I'm looking to upgrade my 32" Vizio to something better. Can you provide info?


* The Apps herein are for demo purpose only and are not preinstalled in the Product. The Apps and their trademarks or logos are the properties of their respective owners, unaffiliated with ViewSonic, and not sponsors or endorsers of the Product.


cnxsoft edit: These are a choice of videos with HEVC/H.265, AVC and YUV codecs at 1080p and 4K resolutions using MP4, dashMP4, or containers, or no container at all (raw). 8-bit or 10-bit depth. (10-bit only for YUV) 2ff7e9595c


 
 
 

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