![lg 47cm565 3d settings lg 47cm565 3d settings](https://s3.manualzz.com/store/data/019461641_1-cd784bccba9e8cf5febb1c7c01aa83e6.png)
All those settings do is flatten the image and then push the whole thing at you – it’s not very realistic 3D and you should just avoid it.
![lg 47cm565 3d settings lg 47cm565 3d settings](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/9VUS75vEKNM/maxresdefault.jpg)
You CAN adjust the settings to push the image at you, and doing it (in my quite humble opinion) utterly and absolutely bites. Things will not be sticking out of the screen and floating over your coffee table. For very realistic 3D, automatically generated from 2D sources, you have to give something up, and with this television that is forward projection. The 2D->3D conversion process in the 55LM6700, when set correctly, will NOT poke you in the eye. Which is, basically, everything.įirst, you need to possibly adjust your expectations.
Lg 47cm565 3d settings how to#
I want to tell you why, and how to get what is really, quite fantastic automatic 3D on pretty much everything with just a 2D source. After six months with this set, all I can say is “Boy, are they wrong”. I keep reading people on forums who claim you can’t get good 2D->3D conversion on this set. I’m writing here only about the automatic 2D->3D conversion that this television has that can let you watch Star Trek Classic, the Brady Bunch, or anything else, in 3D. This has nothing to do with watching movies shot in 3D, such as Avatar or whatnot. This post is about 2D->3D conversion ONLY. So I’m going to assume that you HAVE one of these televisions, and don’t need to be sold on the model. Probably containing the model number 55LM6700, actually. Since this blog has no regular readers, due to its extremely rarely being updated, I’ll assume you’ve landed here due to an internet search. If you don’t have one of those, you can probably stop reading this post right about here. I got one o’ dem LG 55LM6700 3D smart televisions back in July.