![]() The vendors that say 23 instead of 23.976 is just a bit of laziness, because they don't want to make the user interface element wide enough to accommodate the full number. It's a mistake and a bad practice, because they are conflating two different framerates. So any manufacturer or vendor that says 24Hz when they really mean 23.976 is just lazy or stupid. The bluray spec supports other resolutions and framerates, but you'll hardly ever see a movie that's not 23.976. You're not projecting a film in a movie theater. I've seen them, and they're fine, but I've never had the two sets side by side with the same content playing simultaneously to be able to tell any difference.Ģ4Hz is a film standard. Some say the Sony OLEDs (which use LG panels) have better motion processing. Unfortunately the factory presets are not moderate, they are whole hog. The LG TruMotion does a good job, if used at moderate settings. The soap opera effect be better seen with natural subjects. The map, being an unnatural scene, benefits more from having the De-Judder high, but then you use the mountains (or any scene with people) to bring you back to reality. 2 is of course a balance between 1 and 3. Once you get to 3, you start to see a bit of soap-opera effect. I find having De-Judder at 1 helps these tremendously, without introducing any downside. The pan across the map at the start of chapter 2 of Fellowship, and the pan across the mountains at the start of The Two Towers. It is just a question of whether it is worth the extra layer and processing.Ī very good test to determine your needs/tolerance is the Lord of the Rings Blu-Ray discs. PS: I don't think MC+madVR does interpolation, as SVP does, so there should be a difference. I'm just wondering if you did the comparison between MC+madVR properly configured and SVP. On my 30" 2560x1600 Workstation monitor I still upmix to 60 fps from all sources, including 24 and 25 fps. But I do sit a little bit further back than you at around 3.5 metres, and my screen is only 65", and my TV is 4K, although that can make panning worse. I used to do that, and it was fine on my HTPC (see signature). Before trying SVP, did you just try using the MC and madVR functions to upmix to 60 fps and check how that looked? Because MC +madVR can convert any video to 60 fps (and even higher if the hardware and drivers support it) and performs this in real-time. Those instructions are six years old! I guess they still apply, but madVR has changed a lot since then. It would have helped me, and others I'm sure, understand what you were talking about. You should have provided a link to the "Smooth Video Project" site in the first post.
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