> not seen a working 120 Hz stereo setup working on the Acer GD235 monitor.
> if you ask the Nvidia driver or the monitor, it reports 100 Hz instead

This is what I encountered on Dell Alienware OptX AW2310 with Quadro FX3800,
which has been fixed by nVIDIA Linux driver update (in 256.44).

I don't know if the Acer monitor is compatible or not, 
it seems better to ask NVIDIA directly. see:
http://twitter.com/#!/NVIDIAQuadro/status/65188179753435137


Takaaki Fukami

-----
Discovery Platform Technology Dept. Gr.5
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co.,Ltd.



-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Eric 
Bennett
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 8:38 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Stereo solution with Nvidia '3D vision' or '3D vision pro'

We recently had issues setting up a 3D projector and have tried lots of 
combinations of monitors, drivers, cards, glasses, etc.  The answer seems to be 
that interchangeability is very complicated and you won't know unless you try 
it.

 For example, with the last version of the Nvidia driver I tested, the driver 
refused to put out an Nvidia 3D Vision sync signal (stereo 10 in xorg.conf) 
unless there was a 3D capable LCD attached.  I don't know of any technical 
reason the Nvidia 3D Vision couldn't be used with a CRT but Nvidia has 
apparently chosen to disable it (or at least make it hard to enable) in the 
Linux driver.

Going the other direction, using RealD with and LCD system, it might be 
possible but you probably have to match your RealD emitter with RealD glasses.  
Older CrystalEyes glasses (CE3 and earlier) generally do not work with LCD 
monitors because of the polarization in the glasses.  We recently got some CE4 
glasses and they don't seem to have that problem although in practice we are 
using them with a projector, not LCD monitors.  But I don't really like the 
CE4's, there is too much of my field of vision under the glasses that they 
don't cover.

We've observed some really weird configurations that appear to mostly work, 
such as plugging in a RealD emitter and glasses when the driver is configured 
to output a signal for Nvidia 3D Vision (stereo 10 option under Linux).  You 
don't say whether you are using Windows or Linux and there may be variations in 
the drivers, variations by card, etc.  Regarding card to card variations, we've 
observed 3D setups in conference rooms with multiple emitters where some Nvidia 
cards happily drive multiple emitters with particular splitters & boosters, but 
other Nvidia cards don't.  

The bottom line is if you mix hardware you might have problems and vendors are 
unlikely to help you.  If you have CE4 glasses already, you can try it with an 
LCD and it may work.  Otherwise, if you have to buy new glasses (ie, you have 
CE3 or older), you might as well get the Nvidia package with the emitter 
included.  3D Vision Pro uses the 2.4 GHz band instead of IR to transmit the 
sync signal so if you were setting up a conference room in theory the Pro 
version might be less likely to leave dead zones in the conference room.  For a 
single user workstation it's very unlikely that you would get any benefit.

Just to muddy the waters a bit, I have not seen a working 120 Hz stereo setup 
working on the Acer GD235 monitor.  We have a bunch of them set up, and we put 
a 120 Hz mode line in xorg.conf.  If you ask X11 it says it's running at 120.  
But if you ask the Nvidia driver or the monitor, it reports 100 Hz instead, and 
visually there is enough flickering that the monitor and the driver seem to 
have the correct number.  I'm curious if anyone else here has looked in detail 
to make sure their Acer-based system is running at 120 and found that it is 
actually doing what people claim it can do.  I find the 100 Hz LCD flicker 
annoying over long periods so I am still a neanderthal CRT user.  My coworkers 
were convinced their LCD systems were running at 120, when they were actually 
only running at 100.  I'm not sure if this is a driver problem or a monitor 
problem.

-Eric


On May 6, 2011, at 11:27 AM, zhang yu wrote:

> Dear colleagues, 
> 
> Sorry to present the stereo issue to the board again.
> 
> Since my old SGI CRT monitor only has 75 HZ refresh rate, the flickering in 
> stereo mode bothered me a lot.  Recently, I want to update my old CRT to 120 
> HZ LCD.  I have a "Nvidia Quadro FX3800" in my workstation. I would like to 
> make sure  some issues before I make the upgrade.
> 
> 1.  Can I apply the previous stereo emitter (Purchased from Real D, Model 
> #E-2) to 120HZ LCD? Although the company told me this emitter is not 
> compatible with LCD, could some one tell me why? Is it true that the "Nvidia 
> 3D vision" is the only solution for the stereo in LCD?
> 
> 2. Nvidia supply two kinds of 3D emitters. One of them is "3D vision", while 
> the other one is "3D vision pro".  Which one is sufficient for 
> crystallographier user? ("3D vision pro" is much more expensive than "3D 
> vision") 
> It seems that "3D vision" is for home user and powered by the "Nvidia GeForce 
>  series graphic cards". While "3D vision pro" is for professional user and 
> powered by "Nvidia Quardro series graphic card ".   
>    
> 3. It looks that the Nvidia 3D glasses are very compact. Is it comfortable 
> for someone like me already with eyeglasses?
> 
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Yu
> -- 
> Yu Zhang
> HHMI associate 
> Waksman Institute, Rutgers University
> 190 Frelinghuysen Rd.
> Piscataway, NJ, 08904
> 
> 

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