I've come to notice that monitors can overshoot beyond a 255 rgb value on extreme overdrive settings, and this effect is surprisingly noticeable in the UFO white track, I'm now left wondering how exactly can a monitor overshoot beyond white.
And the even more confusing part is how this behavior can be seen on TN panels, where the liquid crystal layer should be "turned off" to let light pass through and display white, so it doesn't really add up.
Is there any explanation to this?
Monitors Overshooting beyond white
Everything about displays and monitors. 120Hz, 144Hz, 240Hz, 4K, 1440p, input lag, display shopping, monitor purchase decisions, compare, versus, debate, and more. Questions? Just ask!
Return to “General — Displays, Graphics & More”
Jump to
- The Main Lobby
- ↳ General — Displays, Graphics & More
- ↳ News / Rumors / Conventions
- ↳ Input Lag / Display Lag / Network Lag
- ↳ Display Comfort — Eyestrain / Headaches / Motionsick
- Everything Better Than 60Hz™
- ↳ Eliminating Motion Blur — LightBoost / ULMB / ELMB / DyAc
- ↳ OLED Displays
- ↳ G-SYNC
- ↳ FreeSync
- ↳ Game Consoles — XBOX and PlayStation — ONE / Series S / Series X / PS5
- ↳ BENQ Zowie Tweaking — Strobe Utility / Blur Reduction / DyAc
- ↳ Display Overclocking
- The Laboratory
- ↳ Test UFO Motion Tests
- ↳ Area 51: Display Science, Research & Engineering
- ↳ Software Developers / Low-Lag Code / Game Programming
- ↳ Pursuit Camera Testing of Display Motion Blur
- ↳ High Frame Rate Video (HFR, UltraHFR, 120fps, 240fps, 1000fps)
- The Cafeteria
- ↳ Offtopic Lounge
- ↳ Niche Issues Affecting Latency — Electrical, Interference, EMI, Unexpected Causes, etc.
- ↳ Forum System / Registration / Suggestions