Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
-
- Posts: 22
- Joined: 21 Apr 2014, 16:40
Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
Or would the loss of light output make it impossible?
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
HDR TVs that are LED-lit will keep using strobing and/or black frame insertion to reduce motion blur, so I'd say yes. It can be used.
Otherwise it would not be possible for manufacturers to keep putting those "480Hz" or "960Hz" stickers on their TVs, something their marketing department considers important
Otherwise it would not be possible for manufacturers to keep putting those "480Hz" or "960Hz" stickers on their TVs, something their marketing department considers important
Steam • GitHub • Stack Overflow
The views and opinions expressed in my posts are my own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Blur Busters.
The views and opinions expressed in my posts are my own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Blur Busters.
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
Real HDR = OLED :]
Anyone working on improving motion in those oled TVs (without artifical frames inserting)?
Anyone working on improving motion in those oled TVs (without artifical frames inserting)?
-
- Posts: 22
- Joined: 21 Apr 2014, 16:40
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
Wouldn't strobing at 60Hz with HDR be very hard on the eyes?
Are there any TVs currently that support low latency BFI AND HDR at a suitable nit?
Are there any TVs currently that support low latency BFI AND HDR at a suitable nit?
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
OLED TVs would simply interpolate, like they do now.SeeNoWeevil wrote:Wouldn't strobing at 60Hz with HDR be very hard on the eyes?
OLED monitors could play with high refresh and BFI. For example a monitor could take a 60Hz input and output in 180Hz where the first two scanouts use the input frame and the last scanout is a black frame.
I don't know if any such monitors are planned. But I doubt 60Hz will be given much thought in OLED gaming monitors to begin with.
In any event, 60Hz will always have some flicker. If you increase image retention (less black frames), you get more blur, if you decrease it (more black frames) you get more noticeable flicker. It's the nature of the beast.
Steam • GitHub • Stack Overflow
The views and opinions expressed in my posts are my own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Blur Busters.
The views and opinions expressed in my posts are my own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Blur Busters.
-
- Posts: 22
- Joined: 21 Apr 2014, 16:40
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
I'd love to see higher refresh OLED with BFI.RealNC wrote:OLED TVs would simply interpolate, like they do now.SeeNoWeevil wrote:Wouldn't strobing at 60Hz with HDR be very hard on the eyes?
OLED monitors could play with high refresh and BFI. For example a monitor could take a 60Hz input and output in 180Hz where the first two scanouts use the input frame and the last scanout is a black frame.
I don't know if any such monitors are planned. But I doubt 60Hz will be given much thought in OLED gaming monitors to begin with.
In any event, 60Hz will always have some flicker. If you increase image retention (less black frames), you get more blur, if you decrease it (more black frames) you get more noticeable flicker. It's the nature of the beast.
Re. eye strain, I was more referring to a high nit display combined with the flicker of BFI. Is 60Hz flicker combined with ~1000nit highlights a problem?
- lexlazootin
- Posts: 1251
- Joined: 16 Dec 2014, 02:57
Re: Can strobing/BFI be used in conjunction with HDR?
Is anyone else super excited that some day now we are going to be able to watch the testufo site at 240hz+ with zero blur and artifacts all in top quality pristine color. God i can't wait.