3D Glasses:
![]() |
![]() |
The glasses that were included with the projector come with a USB cable to charge up the battery in the glasses. With the glasses fully charged we were able to get over two hours of straight use. After this two hour point the glasses were still working but it appeared that the glasses were starting to fall out of sync with the RF Emitter. We simply stopped the movie and charged the glasses for 30 minutes and finished watching the movie (we needed an intermission anyway). The 3D glasses were noticeably heavier than standard glasses due to the battery on the temples, but the nose piece was very comfortable even for someone with a wide bridge nose which has been a disappointment with other 3D glasses I have tried up to this point.
On-Screen Menus:
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The menus for the HD33 are very few which is great for the amateur consumer who just wants a simple plug in and use setup. The manual that comes with the projector is on a CD ROM and surprisingly is very brief, so you won’t be left reading pages and pages of technical instructions after which you feel more lost than you did before reading them. So when it comes to the interaction with the menus on the projector are brief and straight forward and shouldn’t leave you lost. When we plugged in our 3D camera that we took on our tour of the vehicle assembly building tour at the Kennedy Space Center, we simply pressed the 3D button on the remote and selected SBS and after about a minute for the projector to reset to 3D mode and the glasses to sync we were watching 3D content flawlessly.
[…] Cooler @ ocaholic Amazon’s Kindle Fire: Insight and How Not To Get Burned: @ hothardware Optoma HD33 3D Projector Review @ TechwareLabs Gateway ID47H07u Review @ TechReviewSource.com DragonEgg 3.0 Puts GCC & LLVM In […]
[…] projector ships with an RF emitter for the necessary 3D glasses, which are battery powered. Techware Labs found that the batteries would last about 2 hours before they started to show problems, at that point requiring a 30 minute recharge time over a USB […]
[…] awesome, such as full 3D capable at 1080P resolution being the main attraction. We took the …www.techwarelabs.com/optoma-hd33-full-3d-1080p-projector/ Google Alerts – 3d Share and […]
[…] necessary 3D glasses, which are battery powered. Techware Labs found that the batteri… before they started to show problems, at […]
[…] Optoma HD33 3D Projector Review @ TechwareLabs […]
[…] Optoma HD33 3D Projector Review @ TechwareLabs […]
[…] LLVM In One BedTechReviewSource sits down with the Gateway ID47H07uTechwareLabs focuses on the Optoma HD33 3D ProjectorHotHardware presents Amazon’s Kindle Fire: Insight and How Not To Get BurnedTo close out this […]