Baron of Sun wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 06:03
It's not the first time I hear someone saying Pulsar for OLED needs research to get it work. Can someone explain why? I don't get it. The LG C1 and CX where already able to do subrefresh rolling scan. Why would it be so difficult to get it to work in comparison to an LCD?
Just because the aforementioned TVs can do BFI at all, doesn't mean that it's worthwhile using or even comparable to LCD backlight strobing.
The appeal of the ULMB2 models is that it can do <1ms strobe 'on' period (or MPRT, if you want to use the misnomer) @ 60Hz, which cuts the total transition time by 15,66667 (16,66667 ms - 15,66667 ms = 1ms)
Strictly speaking from a
fixed refresh rate strobing implementation:
To be able to get OLED to the same levels of
brightness and
clarity as ULMB2, you'd need:
• HW Implementation (See
custom rolling scan &
discussion on BFI &
reminder)
• 1000Hz capable OLED and use SW BFI (CRT shader emulator)
They both need to drive the brightness high enough to achieve ~100cd/m² @ <6% duty cycle.
That's a minimum 1700cd/m² voltage amplitude target. This also assumes that the pixels don't kill themselves from the high voltage.
This simply isn't a possible brightness value achievable on any OLED right now.
I have yet to see a OLED with <1ms MPRT.
A Pulsar(VRR+PWM) implementation makes this even more impossible.
I already knew DT was a meme, but this one...

Shills 60hz strobing, yet shits on 8K display res even though it's a minimum target for 24-32" displays
