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#1
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Hi
I'm reluctantly replacing my sony 21in crt after many years of great pics. After checking out market, am I correct in thinking only 100hz sets cope with motion blur effectively, Samsung have good reviews but are only 50hz, any advice gratefully received ( of a televisual nature ! ) Cheers - Rog |
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#2
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In article
s.com, rog scribeth thus Hi I'm reluctantly replacing my sony 21in crt after many years of great pics. After checking out market, am I correct in thinking only 100hz sets cope with motion blur effectively, Samsung have good reviews but are only 50hz, any advice gratefully received ( of a televisual nature ! ) Cheers - Rog I spent some time worrying about all that but just before Xmas we bought a Sony KDL40EX503U and quite frankly I've err .. umm .. just enjoyed the programmes can't fault it at all. Its as good as what they transit and seems to render better Pix that what I've seen on in store demos. And since the HD service has started up around here the Pix is sometimes stunning when they get it right at the other end;! Its also got a net connection for iplayer and Youtube and others I haven't got around to as yet but no motion blur that I've seen !.. -- Tony Sayer |
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#3
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On 20/04/2011 9:23 PM, rog wrote:
Hi I'm reluctantly replacing my sony 21in crt after many years of great pics. After checking out market, am I correct in thinking only 100hz sets cope with motion blur effectively, Samsung have good reviews but are only 50hz, any advice gratefully received ( of a televisual nature ! ) Cheers - Rog UK tv is 50hz. many people with 100hz sets end up turning off the ' picture enhancement ' processing that comes with them. -- Gareth. That fly.... Is your magic wand. |
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#4
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On Wednesday, April 20th, 2011 at 13:23:45h -0700, Rog wrote:
After checking out market, am I correct in thinking only 100hz sets cope with motion blur effectively, Samsung have good reviews but are only 50hz That is just not correct at all. Go to http://www.samsung.COM/uk/consumer/tv-audio-video/television/led-tv/index.idx?pagetype=subtype and you will see that you can choose Samsung LED Televisions on the basis of being either 100 Hz or *200* Hz. |
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#5
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Faster refresh rates may or may not help with motion blur.
For me, I can easily see a 50Hz flicker, so - motion blur aside - I simply must have a 100Hz or higher refresh rate (actually my flicker-detection neurons top out at about 85Hz). If your TV behaves like a cinema projector - simply flashing each picture up two or more times - then you will escape the headache-inducing 50Hz flicker but it won't help at all towards reducing motion blur. You've only got to see how dreadful even a fairly slow pan looks on a cinema screen. However, if your TV does some fancy processing to interpolate intermediate frames, which it then shows between the real ones as part of the flicker reduction regime, then you'll enjoy smoother apparent motion as well. BUT, it all depends on how good the processing is, what parameters Samsung consider to be important, and what - exactly - you personally mean by motion blur. My Panny plasma is supposed to have all sorts of fancy processing and such, and I still think motion looks horribly flickery (but not blurry). I'd take a good long look at a 50Hz TV in the shop before buying it. If you find it satisfactory for your particular brain, then go for it. SteveT |
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#6
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"Steve Thackery" wrote in message
... Faster refresh rates may or may not help with motion blur. For me, I can easily see a 50Hz flicker, so - motion blur aside - I simply must have a 100Hz or higher refresh rate (actually my flicker-detection neurons top out at about 85Hz). If your TV behaves like a cinema projector - simply flashing each picture up two or more times - then you will escape the headache-inducing 50Hz flicker but it won't help at all towards reducing motion blur. Flicker is a totally different issue. LCD screens do not flicker in the way that CRTs do. You've only got to see how dreadful even a fairly slow pan looks on a cinema screen. However, if your TV does some fancy processing to interpolate intermediate frames, which it then shows between the real ones as part of the flicker reduction regime, then you'll enjoy smoother apparent motion as well. BUT, it all depends on how good the processing is, what parameters Samsung consider to be important, and what - exactly - you personally mean by motion blur. My Panny plasma is supposed to have all sorts of fancy processing and such, and I still think motion looks horribly flickery (but not blurry). I'd take a good long look at a 50Hz TV in the shop before buying it. If you find it satisfactory for your particular brain, then go for it. SteveT -- Brian Gregory. (In the UK) To email me remove the letter vee. |
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#7
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On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 23:52:11 +0100, "Brian Gregory [UK]"
wrote: "Steve Thackery" wrote in message ... Faster refresh rates may or may not help with motion blur. For me, I can easily see a 50Hz flicker, so - motion blur aside - I simply must have a 100Hz or higher refresh rate (actually my flicker-detection neurons top out at about 85Hz). If your TV behaves like a cinema projector - simply flashing each picture up two or more times - then you will escape the headache-inducing 50Hz flicker but it won't help at all towards reducing motion blur. Flicker is a totally different issue. LCD screens do not flicker in the way that CRTs do. That is correct. I don't understand why their is fashion for have 100Hz or even higher for LCD panels. It is just a question of higher numbers being "better" for the marketing department. I could also not stand the flicker at 50Hz so bought a 100Hz TV but the extra processing does introduce artifacts. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
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#8
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snip
I spent some time worrying about all that but just before Xmas we bought a Sony KDL40EX503U and quite frankly I've err .. umm .. just enjoyed the programmes can't fault it at all. I also bought the 32EX503 (1080 + 100Hz motionflow + Freeview HD) and find it excellent - the best LCD picture I've seen - particularly good on SD transmissions. It does a great job on fast motion - eg tennis balls, footballs. Slight negatives: 1. Blacks become a bit grey when viewed at an angle. 2. Sound is decent, but not great bass - it is a thin TV with downfiring speakers. better than most thin TVs. 3. Channel change could be a bit faster. |
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#9
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On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 22:08:25 +0100, tony sayer
wrote: I spent some time worrying about all that but just before Xmas we bought a Sony KDL40EX503U and quite frankly I've err .. umm .. just enjoyed the programmes can't fault it at all... Same here :-) -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
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#10
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In article , viewer
scribeth thus snip I spent some time worrying about all that but just before Xmas we bought a Sony KDL40EX503U and quite frankly I've err .. umm .. just enjoyed the programmes can't fault it at all. I also bought the 32EX503 (1080 + 100Hz motionflow + Freeview HD) and find it excellent - the best LCD picture I've seen - particularly good on SD transmissions. It does a great job on fast motion - eg tennis balls, footballs. Slight negatives: 1. Blacks become a bit grey when viewed at an angle. Not noticed that, but then again its -my- telly and when -I- want to watch it everyone else has to sit elsewhere;!.. 2. Sound is decent, but not great bass - it is a thin TV with downfiring speakers. better than most thin TVs. Not bothered to criticise that at all, this is the way of flat panel TV's if I need the sound better the nearby ESL63's can do that ..3. Channel change could be a bit faster. Yes that does seem rather sluggish.. But a lot of the time we're using an external sat receiver which is quite fast so its not really a problem.. -- Tony Sayer |
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