It was considered to be one of the problems of early 3D television. Today, it is far better controlled and generally never a problem.
I think its active glasses are creating the noticeable flickering problem. Check out the batteries as they may be poor. Generally though, active 3D TV flickers due to the flickering nature of its glasses. If you're looking for another option, nowadays the passive 3D TV is on a boom.
No, the active 3D glasses are very popular for flickering and causing eye strain.
Well friend you have to wait because in all present 3D TVs SONY do have flickering problem but they are going to launch FPR based 3D TV which will be totally flicker free.
I have a Samsung 3D telly and it does not flicker..... sounds as though yours has a fault, take it back.
Check batteries in the glasses and make sure the glasses are properly paired to the television. Make sure they are set up according to the manufacturer's instructions and the flicker is likely to be eliminated.
Samsung glasses receive 1080p in each eye at one time. Meanwhile, the other eye will see a black screen. This flickering from one eye to the other will cause headaches. But yes, the image quality is great. LG Cinema 3D operates differently. Each receives 540p at the same time. There is no flickering but the image is not as high quality due to the lower resolution.
Most 3D televisions are flicker free. Active 3D can sometimes show some flickering but if they are properly set up, the flicker is eliminated or not visible. When buying, make sure you experience as many models as you can to help you decide which is the most comfortable and most realistic.
No 3D glasses are part of the 3D HDTV that must be used for a PS4 to show something in 3D
The 3d part kinda gives it away don't you think?
That's correct
Visit another store and see a Samsung television that has been installed properly. Flickering is only a problem if the glasses are not charged up sufficiently or haven't been properly set up. Go find a pace where they have taken a few minutes to make sure they have their television set up correctly.
Each image you see on the television screen is transmitted in the form of "lines." Some 3D TVs, like Samsung ones, for example, use 1080 lines or "p" for each eye. They send images to the glasses by flickering. However this is done very rapidly and can't be noticed unless the battery runs low on them. If you keep watching the flickering image, you may get headaches or experience dizziness. Flicker free 3D TVs like LG's offer high-quality images without the worry of headaches!