

Here are a few pix of my Dolby 3D glasses: (BTW my glasses don't look like any of the ones pictured in that last link.) I've got a few at home that can be calibrated using boiling or iced water. I'm going to measure the water temperature with a different thermometer, just to make sure that the built-in one is reading right. The subsequent wash cycle (with glasses loaded) is around 120F.Īnybody notice similar results with the Knight washer and the high-capacity trays (pictured in the original post) ? This translates to a rinse cycle around 130F with glasses loaded. So the rinse cycle (empty) needs to be around 140F. However, the glasses themselves (2 sets of 60pr) will cool the water by about 12F. This means that the rinse cycle needs to be around 130F in order for the wash cycle to be at 120F, which is the minimum for the chemicals to work. And, after opening the washer, removing clean glasses and inserting used ones, the temperature of that water drops by about 10 degrees (F). The wash cycle re-uses the leftover water from the rinse cycle. I've noticed that calibrating the Knight (KLE-175GT) washer can be a bit tricky. The 834's will take more wash cycles but I don't recall the data.ĭo you agree? Is cat832 really that design? I assume CAT 834 are the classic ones with spherical 'real' glas, while the cheaper CAT832 are the new type with 'silver foil' glasses. Which one would you advise?ĭolbys current official pricelist quotes CAT834 at 17$, CAT832 at 12$.

Presently I am using 834's but I want to go plastic. Posted 05-15-2011 03:08 dont want you to elaborate on the "long story" about differences between cat830 and cat832 glasses, but a few words will be appreciated.Īre the lens the same? I dont care if it is only a matter of frame design. The washer we have only takes about 90 seconds. We just stack 'em 4 deep on each side - if you put them in carefully they'll usually stay up the way they're supposed to. Mike - what have you been doing about the nesting situation? Do you stack fewer? or do you toss 'em in and let the washer somehow deal with the nesting?Īnd does the washer really only take 3min to do the job? Sam - could you send that to me, too? We have those same trays and while they do work well, the glasses do tend to nest together.īut seriously, Sam - any reason I get zero results when Googling "Dolby Cat 832" ? the 830's were not intended for the USA cinemas. 832 glasses which is what you should have. There is new tray from Marlin to deal with Cat. (I haven't been able to test the washer yet because it was just installed and now I'm waiting for the ECO chemical dealers to make their site visit to finish setting it up.) My concern is that they won't all get cleaned.

After about the 2nd or 3rd level, they start sliding all into each other. Looks like we have the older Cat 830 style. Has anybody had any luck stacking that many pairs of glasses neatly like in the promotional photograph? Ours are not stacking too nice. And it looks like maybe 2 baskets can fit into the Knight commercial dishwasher. The new trays can hold up to 48 pairs of the Cat 834 glasses, or 60 pairs of the new plastic Cat 830 glasses. These trays are different from the ones shown in the Dolby training video. We have those new wire trays for the Dolby 3D glasses. "What are these things and WHY are they BLUE?"

#BEST 3D GLASSES AVS PASSWORD#
My profile | my password | search | faq & rules | forum home Home Products Store Forum Warehouse Contact Us Instead of a chip that contains all 33.3 million pixels needed to display 8K resolution, JVC uses 4K chips (x3) combined with the pixel shifting process.Film-Tech Forum ARCHIVE: Washing Dolby 3D Glasses HDMI: All projectors have two HDMI inputs with 8K/60 and 4K/120 resolution support, 48Gps transfer rate support, and HDR10/10+ support.ĨK/e-Shift: Since squeezing all the pixels needed for 8K resolution on the size chips needed in a video projector is very expensive, JVC uses Pixel Shifting (referred to as e-Shift or e-ShiftX by JVC – it is sometimes also referred generically as “pixel wiggling”) to display images. The laser light source doesn’t require periodic replacement as in traditional lamp-based projectors. A portion of the blue light generated by the laser is passed through while the rest hits the yellow phosphor wheel which creates red and green light. Key Featuresģ-Chip DILA (Direct Drive Digital Amplifier): Separate reflective chips for red, green, and blue primary colors.īLU-Escent laser light source: A blue laser is combined with a yellow phosphor wheel. JVC DLA-RS4100 (pictured) and DLA-NZ9 have identical features.
