Re: OLED BFI Options?
Posted: 18 Mar 2023, 09:47
Do you happen to have any information on BFI for the LG OLED TVs? I don't want to get OLED monitors because they just don't have as many options and aren't big enough for me.
Who you gonna call? The Blur Busters! For Everything Better Than 60Hz™
https://forums.blurbusters.com/
Do you happen to have any information on BFI for the LG OLED TVs? I don't want to get OLED monitors because they just don't have as many options and aren't big enough for me.
Lower is always better, naturally
This only refers to the current 240Hz OLED backplane.
Ok. I would like to use 3D glasses but this has 2 disadvantages with the rainbow and with no 50/60Hz single-strobe support.Chief Blur Buster wrote: ↑19 Mar 2023, 02:58This only refers to the current 240Hz OLED backplane.
You can get close to 0.5ms MPRT with PlayStation VR2 already (lower pulse widths at lower brightnesses).
Alternatively, you can already get 0.3ms MPRT with Oculus Quest 2, or Valve Index 2.
Also, there's the quality improvement afforded by brute framerate-based motion blur reduction, so on a fast-GtG display (e.g. OLED or direct-view MicroLED) 1ms MPRT via 1000fps 1000Hz looks better than 0.5ms MPRT strobed. There is a kind of a minor biasing factor upwards in early tests with stobeless motion blur reduction; because of the extra brightness and the lack of stroboscopic effects; However, not too much though. 0.5ms vs 4ms is a whopping 8x difference in display motion blur (much like a 1/240sec camera photograph and a 1/2000sec camera photograph)
Chief Blur Buster wrote: ↑19 Mar 2023, 02:58This only refers to the current 240Hz OLED backplane.
You can get close to 0.5ms MPRT with PlayStation VR2 already (lower pulse widths at lower brightnesses).
Alternatively, you can already get 0.3ms MPRT with Oculus Quest 2, or Valve Index 2.
Also, there's the quality improvement afforded by brute framerate-based motion blur reduction, so on a fast-GtG display (e.g. OLED or direct-view MicroLED) 1ms MPRT via 1000fps 1000Hz looks better than 0.5ms MPRT strobed. There is a kind of a minor biasing factor upwards in early tests with stobeless motion blur reduction; because of the extra brightness and the lack of stroboscopic effects; However, not too much though. 0.5ms vs 4ms is a whopping 8x difference in display motion blur (much like a 1/240sec camera photograph and a 1/2000sec camera photograph)
Working with the panel limitations, the 240Hz OLEDs can definitely do BFI at the scaler vendor level, without LG's involvement, so having the scaler vendor add BFI is a solution for any OLED vendor wanting to add BFI to their unit.Adi-C wrote: ↑10 May 2023, 12:10So eve monitors, apparently now called Dough is doing some half software- half hardware bfi at 120hz, and maybe 80hz later on
https://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?s ... 1683706450
I wonder if this is what Chief alluded to (that they're working on a 240hz oled with bfi at 120), but probably not, since they don't mention BlurBusters other than link to a test at the BB website.
InterestingAdi-C wrote: ↑10 May 2023, 12:10So eve monitors, apparently now called Dough is doing some half software- half hardware bfi at 120hz, and maybe 80hz later on
https://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?s ... 1683706450
I wonder if this is what Chief alluded to (that they're working on a 240hz oled with bfi at 120), but probably not, since they don't mention BlurBusters other than link to a test at the BB website.