Owner's Manual

on
this disc have been encoded in "flat
30",
so that you can view the pattern
while the display
is
in
3D
mode. The patterns will still appear flat,
but
this mode
is
useful for setting up the
3D
mode
of
the display
and
making sure brightness,
contrast, etc. are correct. Most displays have a completely different set
of
presets
for
3D
mode, so it's necessary to
run
through the same calibration steps for
both
2D
and
3D
modes.
To
put
the disc in "flat
3D"
mode, go to the Setup menu,
at
the
bottom
of
the
main menu. Select the
"3D"
checkbox under "Stereoscopic." This will cause the
player to go into
3D
mode
whenever a pattern
is
selected.
It
will return to
2D
mode
when you return to the menu,
or
when an
SD
pattern
is
selected. Because
switching modes can be time-consuming
on
many
displays, we recommend using
the left
and
right arrows
on
the remote to switch from pattern to pattern whenever
possible. This will minimize the
amount
of
mode switching
you
will see.
Also be sure to check
out
the two
3D
videos
on
the disc,
the
Spears & Munsil
Montage
and
the
DTS
Living World clip.
General
These are miscellaneous patterns useful for checking for proper
3D
display setup
and
functioning.
Visual Crosstalk
This
is
a set
of
patterns useful for visually estimating the
amount
of
crosstalk
between the left
and
right eye
that
your display has. To compare two displays
numerically, you need to kno\v the actual gamma
of
the display near black, in
3D
mode, which generally requires measurement equipment.
If
you don't
know
the
gamma
and
just
want
a rough idea
of
how
much
crosstalk the display has, choose
2.4 gamma,
but
don't expect the numbers from
one
display to be comparable
to another display unless you are confident the two displays have near-identical
gamma
near black, in
3D
mode.
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