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View Poll Results: Which is the hz when view blu-ray 24p? | |||
Plasma 48hz |
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0 | 0% |
Plasma 60hz |
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0 | 0% |
Plasma 72hz |
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1 | 4.55% |
Plasma 96hz |
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4 | 18.18% |
LCD 60hz |
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2 | 9.09% |
LCD 120hz |
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10 | 45.45% |
LCD 240hz |
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5 | 22.73% |
Voters: 22. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#2 |
Senior Member
![]() Aug 2008
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I would say:
1. Plasma 96Hz (with 4:4 pulldown) 2. Plasma 72Hz (with 3:3 pulldown) 3. LCD 240Hz (with 10:10 pulldown), when reviewed as such 4. LCD 120Hz (with 5:5 pulldown, NOT 3:2 pulldown to 60Hz and doubled to 120Hz) Forget the rest, IMHO ( ![]() See also this VERY nice thread: https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread.php?t=5155 |
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#3 |
Banned
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Be careful when buying 120Hz/240Hz LCDs. The true 120Hz and true 240Hz offer the best picture since they eliminate judder (PAL btw has no judder but the audio is sped up, ruining all the music) and properly implemented interpolation will be awesome when it comes. There is already interpolation done by your TV or player when it upscales standard definition content. Some upscaling interpolation doesn't get implemented well, but everyone knows it is a good thing in principle (and great on high end Sony sets and the customizable PS3)
Examples of consumer confusion. Toshiba does not make true 240Hz sets. Neither does LG. What they do is use 240Hz backlight scanning ... and there's a good explanation of this in an LG ad in the latest Sound and Vision ... LG admits that all it is doing is interspersing blank frames (turning the backlight off for an instant) with the true frames ... this is supposed to encourage your own eyes to do biological interpolation ... nice theory but I think it's bonkers. Samsung and Sony are the only ones I know of that make true 240Hz. I think there's a rumor that Vizio may eventually make them too. PS I don't know too much about plasma since I hate plasmas but if those frame rates are accurate then nothing on plasma can match a true 120Hz or true 240Hz LCD. 96Hz frame rate for example would eliminate judder for 24p blu-ray sources but for 60p or 30p sources (from things shot on video or from a video game, etc.) -- judder would be introduced (for DVDs of movies it also kind of matters -- the DVDs won't be in 24p like the film so they introduce judder at the DVD source -- but then the 96Hz frame rate will effectively introduce even more judder unless the TV is able to calculate the original frames from the judder-infested DVD ... which I doubt tvs do). 240Hz is also not perfect. Perfect would be 600Hz since then all frame rate sources would not have any judder added to them by the TV. For video games, the higher the better since video game frame rates are variable unless you have them v-sync Last edited by luscious; 06-16-2009 at 04:56 PM. |
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#4 | |
Senior Member
![]() Aug 2008
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![]() Quote:
By the way, the TS (Topic Starter) only asks for 24p, not for PAL, not for 60i/p, not for 30p. Since many 120Hz LCD's use 3:2 pulldown or interpolate without the ability to turn that off, they are useless in experiencing 24p (or, 'filmic' content). Since there are no professional reviews as of yet mentioning the pulldown process used in the new 240Hz displays, we don't know for sure yet if these LCD's are currently useless/pointless or not (from a 24p-perspective, that is). So again, please follow the link and read this excelent piece of info on the thread mentioned in my former post. |
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#5 |
Banned
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Upscale interpolation is just the algorithm used to upconvert dvds or standard def content on bds. Interpolation is also done in photoshop when resampling images to a higher resolution. Every one in the world believes this interpolation is better than the alternative (there should be a setting to stretch images proportionally without interpolation in photoshop -- the quality becomes poor).
Interpolation for motion in videos however doesn't have good algorithms yet. But eventually, there will be good ones. Since the algorithms aren't good yet, it's largely a matter of taste. |
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#6 |
Blu-ray Knight
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...which is very obvious based on your post. Nothing can match the picture of true 120/240Hz? And the reason for this is why? Because the refresh (not frame) rates are higher? Hardly. As long as you refresh at a multiple of 24, there will be no discernable difference. Now, add an order of magnitude faster response time with plasma in addition to 900-1080 lines of motion resolution and significantly higher true contrast ratios, and the clear winner will be plasma. Oh, and 24p is a setting on plasma that is only used with 24p sources. The rest of the time the set refreshes at 60Hz.
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#8 | |
Banned
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#9 |
Junior Member
Apr 2008
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but won't any flat panel TV that can process 24fps video from the compatible BDs show basically the same motion detail irregardless of its maximum refresh rate (e.g. 600Hz plasma, 240Hz or 120Hz LCD)?
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#11 |
Banned
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Without interpolation, it should be the same (only difference might be flicker or eye strain). With interpolation higher is better. But interpolation algorithms are not good yet.
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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If you are simply referring to the various displays, with 24p on, displaying a similar judder/flicker-free picture when playing a BD, then yes, they all pretty much display similar pictures in this respect. However, that's where the similarities end. |
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#14 | |
Junior Member
Apr 2008
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#15 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#16 | |
Banned
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Regarding motion resolution ... some of the tests for motion resolution that are floated about are biased, basically designed by companies that make plasma televisions. They are not much more useful than the dynamic contrast ratios that are advertised. If you are going to use it as a monitor as well the most important thing by far is that tv doesn't chop off part of the image. Even if you're not going to do that, you want the whole image for movies too even if nothing important is chopped off ... chopping off part of the image causes image distortion (basically the image will not fit the native resolution perfectly so it would need to be upconverted to fit -- these are your blu-rays ...). I would not roll the dice on plasma for that reason (since hardly anyone uses them as monitors, they might not include that feature or implement it well). |
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#17 | |
Junior Member
Apr 2008
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#19 |
Banned
Jun 2009
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LCD 60hz
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#20 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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In the end, though, let your eyes be your guide. I've yet to see blurring or motion problems on plasma, yet every LCD I have ever viewed has had some degree of motion blurring (without the soap-opera interpolation turned-on). To me, it makes the picture unwatchable (both blur and interpolation), which is one of the many reasons I will stay with my plasmas. |
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