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#1 |
Banned
May 2016
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I totally get the function of Samsung displays' "Fit to Screen" setting, which is what controls overscan and as such forces the display to exhibit "full pixel" information; in my last television, which was a 1080p Sony SXRD rear projection set, I believe overscan was applied automatically, as the "Full" widescreen setting introduced images that appeared overscanned (though weren't supposed to using such a setting)…but my new Samsung NU8000 UHD TV has a setting in the Fit to Screen option area that is called "Auto," and I don't understand how this works...
I would think overscan would be just an on/off thing, so what is the "Auto" setting actually doing when engaged for Fit to Screen -- notably when playing DVDs and Blu-rays? Should this be left to Auto, or should I select the on/off position? As a point of reference, I actually PREFER overscan on my sets, because it reduces the black letterboxing areas of scope films and enables the "matted" widescreen transfers (1.85 or 1.78) to fill the screen without the tiny letterboxing (though I know this is probably introducing a resolution reduction somewhere). But does anyone know what "Auto" Fit to Screen does on Samsungs? |
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#2 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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1.78:1 pictures aren't matted, they're full screen, you do on occasion have some window or pillar boxing on older masters, but if you're using overscan with a decent 1.78:1 transfer you're just losing video information from all four sides. |
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#3 | |||
Banned
May 2016
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Somehow I knew it was gonna be you who responded, at least first, Chip...
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Are you saying that WITHOUT overscan, these transfers SHOULD actually exhibit some letterboxing? |
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#4 | |||||
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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![]() ![]() Both have some pillar-boxing, but it's definitely not something I'd switch overscan on for. |
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Thanks given by: | IntelliVolume (10-21-2018) |
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#5 | ||||
Banned
May 2016
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The only thing I don't care for when it comes to overscan being OFF is that the wider scope films at 2.40 and 2.35 exhibit GREATER letterboxed areas, making my screen -- which I already sit too far away from (as it was in the last case too) -- seem even SMALLER because the image "shrinks" from top and bottom... ![]() Quote:
What about 1.85:1 transfers? THOSE will exhibit some minor letterboxing on top and bottom, yes? Quote:
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You're right, though; those instances wouldn't require any need for overscan... |
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#6 |
Site Manager
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Just a note, when you ovescan a 1080 image on a 1080 HDTV set (or a 2160 on a 2160 UHD TV) the image gets a little blurry because it's being resized and the resizing fuzzes the smallest details and resolution , so you don't get the full 1080 resolution quality / sharpness.
(That's why you have the 1:1 pixel no overscan setting) |
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#7 | |||
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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![]() You can check your overscan with the slide below: ![]() |
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#8 | |
Banned
May 2016
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I don't notice any blurriness, but the reason I was keeping the screen on with overscan was because I don't care for the larger black letterboxing areas on scope films. |
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#9 | ||
Banned
May 2016
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Well, I switched the NU8000 to "Fit to Screen: AUTO" last night before watching the DVD of the original Haunting (the black and white version from Robert Wise) and the film played back with the smaller letterboxing areas, as it always did -- in other words, the letterboxing areas didn't get larger, which they normally do when I've played with Fit to Screen: On, leading me to believe the AUTO setting isn't doing anything...
However, this brings me to: Quote:
HERE'S the thread: https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread.php?t=165523 About halfway down the first page, you will see where a member mentions this: Screen fit. I really hate the black bars. To which someone replies: you do realise that screen fit makes the black bars bigger, right? This is precisely what's happening when I engage Fit to Screen -- 2.35:1 and 2.40:1 films play back with almost massive letterboxing, and it's quite distracting. Quote:
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#10 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#11 | |
Banned
May 2016
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you do realise that screen fit makes the black bars bigger, right? This was taken from that thread I linked to which was discussing this topic... |
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#13 | |
Banned
May 2016
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Thanks given by: | chip75 (10-22-2018) |
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#14 |
Banned
May 2016
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So now the question becomes...why did the AUTO setting of the Samsung's Fit to Screen feature not show the DVD I watched last night in the un-overscanned version?
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#15 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#16 |
Banned
May 2016
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Huh?
I was merely repeating what I had experienced after turning Fit to Screen on AUTO last night before watching The Haunting DVD -- using Fit to Screen AUTO, there STILL seemed to be overscan taking place when watching this disc... |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Did you switch from Auto to On to see if there was any change whilst you watched it?
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#18 | |
Banned
May 2016
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In other words, in order to COMPLETELY eliminate overscan, I'm going to HAVE to force Fit to Screen ON... |
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#19 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#20 |
Banned
May 2016
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Oh...so the panel may IGNORE overscan: off settings when standard definition discs are played from the OPPO? I didn't know that overscan was sometimes dependent on resolution; should I try a Blu-ray with Fit to Screen on AUTO and see what happens?
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