Yes, there are. First kind is those that you have to plug in to charge the battery. They use something called shutter system and when your left eye sees an image, your right eye receives a completely black frame and vice versa. This causes the flickering and blurring of the image and it's pretty bad for your eye health. These glasses are also heavy and expensive. The other kind is the Cinema 3D glasses. They are battery free and lightwieght 3D glasses. They don't use shutter system, generating flicker free and crosstalk free 3D images. They are also way more cheaper.
Yes, you need special glasses to watch 3D TV. And, there are different types of glasses for different kinds of 3D TV.
No. there is no way you can use LG 3D glasses on Samsung 3D TV, they use different technology.
LG televisions use passive glasses so you will not find LG active glasses. Actually, LG has made several models of active 3D televisions, despite their current push for passive. LG glasses such as the AGS100 will not work with Samsung televisions. If you are looking for lower priced glasses for your Samsung TV, try the Monoprice website.
Yes you most certainly can buy 3d television glasses on Ebay. There are many different websites from which you can purchase and it all depends on what style of 3d glasses you desire. www.nextag.com
Battery powered 3D glasses means they are active 3D glasses and they only work with their own manufactured brand. However the compatibility of passive 3D glasses for other TVs are much higher. They work on any 3D TVs or theaters if they use the same passive technology. The passive 3D TV glasses are also lightweight due to no batteries being attatched. Plus, they don't need to be charged everytime before/after use unlike the active ones.
No.First off, they are not "Blu-Ray" glasses. The 3D comes from the TV, not the disk player. Plug a 3D player into a regular TV and you won't see 3D.Second, there are 2 types of 3D glasses: active and passive. Passive are the kind you get in a movie theater, with the lenses polarized in two different axes. Active glasses use a shutter system and require a battery in the glasses. Active glasses are often unique to a TV brand - you can't use your Panasonic glasses on your friend's Sony 3DTV.
Active 3d glasses will not work with passive 3d TV. Active glasses use shutter 3D technology that requires a power source to power the lenses in the glasses. Passive glasses don't have electronics or batteries. Hence, they are lighter and more comfortable. Active and passive TV work using completely different technology and thus active glasses cannot work on passive TV.
There are many types of 3D images, but some TVs allow you to view 3D content without glasses, but they are less common and cost a bit more.
Samsung 3D TVs use shutter glasses. Shutter glasses work by receiving signals from the television. There are a number of third party suppliers of 3D glasses and it might be worth trying a different type. When purchasing alternatives, make sure the glasses are compatible with your television.
Some 3D television sets include the 3D glasses, but some do not. 3D glasses are necessary to get the full three dimensional effects that the television is capable of showing.
For any passive 3D television, the 3D glasses from movie theaters will work.
There are two types of 3D TV. One is the active type and the other is passive 3D TV. The first one is 'shutter glasses' and the second is 'polarized glasses'. Shutter glasses have a kind of shutter that needs a rechargeable battery. The active glasses last over 100 hours on a single charge these days and are as light as some passive glasses. Depending on the type of 3D television you have you will need one or other type of glasses.