[MPlayer-users] Forcing other framerates
Rolf Ernst
rolf.ernst at silverlightning.org
Mon Apr 26 18:02:05 CEST 2010
On 4/26/2010 10:59 AM, meino.cramer at gmx.de wrote:
> "Ing. Daniel Rozsnyó"<daniel at rozsnyo.com> [10-04-26 17:21]:
>
>> meino.cramer at gmx.de wrote:
>>
>>> RC<cooleyr at gmail.com> [10-04-25 20:00]:
>>>
>>>> On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 16:32:40 +0200
>>>> meino.cramer at gmx.de wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> I bought a new LCD monitor with 60Hz framerate.
>>>>> When playing videos sometimes I git a distortet
>>>>> screen (not only with mplayer!!!). I think, it
>>>>> is because the video plays at 50Hz framerate
>>>>> which then interferes with the 60Hz refresh rate
>>>>> of the monitor.
>>>>>
>>>> LCDs effectively do not have a refresh rate (or a "framerate").
>>>>
>> LCD has a refresh rate! It refreshes the picture from top to bottom,
>> just the "memory effect" of the screen is much bigger than on CRT. The
>> LCD is effectively a visible dynamic memory (DRAM).
>>
> That means...?
> Displaying Image contents with a rate of 25Hz to a technology
> drawing every 1/60 second a picture...gives...?
>
>
>>
>>>> You've not described what this "distortet screen" problem is, so
>>>> nobody
>>>> can possibly help.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Ha. I'm the idiot.
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> MPlayer-users mailing list
>>>> MPlayer-users at mplayerhq.hu
>>>> https://lists.mplayerhq.hu/mailman/listinfo/mplayer-users
>>>>
>>>>
>>> If LCDs have no framerate or refresh rate, they will not draw
>>> frames from top to bottom? How then?
>>> A try for a better explanation:
>>> Certain videos (for example the Neo<->Smith fight sceen in Matrix
>>> Revoluitions) with fast changing lightning conditions expose some
>>> screen distortions.
>>> They are of two kind:
>>> The upper half of the screen is still in "bright condition"
>>> when the lower half is in "dark condition" -- what comes first and
>>> where this "break" is, depends. Also varying is the position
>>> of this "break" on the screen.
>>>
>> That is a missing vertical synchronization - what -vo are you using? On
>> what video card and which drivers? Usually on dualhead the vsync is
>> hard to get..
>>
> Oh, oh...some mails ago I got a hint to disable all VSYNCs in the
> nvidia settings...
>
> So...using -vo xv gives me the fastest (read: normal speed) video
> with audio and video in sync.
> Other drivers result in the message that my two core 3800+ AMD
> CPU is to slow....(?)
> My graühics card is ai
> nVidia Corporation G73 [GeForce 7600 GT] (rev a2) which run with
> the current nvidia drivers on a Linux box.
> I myself and my computer each uses only one head ;)
> Most of the time I use my own... ;) ;)
> I disabled AutoTwinDevice in the Xorg.conf as I did with
> TwindDevice (dont remember the correct names of that parameters, but
> was something like that.).
>
> Since 60Hz is common for LCD I am asking myself, whether I am the
> only one having problems with playing 25Hz/region 2 contents...?!
>
> Since it also happens for example with the fight scene Neo<->Agent
> Smith in Matrix Revolutions (DVD, region 2) I think, it is not
> a bug in the video itsself....
>
> I am a little (read: very) frustrated, since this monitor is new
> and I like its colors and features, but...
>
> So any help to circumvent this problem is *very* appreciated! :O)
>
> Have a flicker-free evening! :O))
> Best regards,
> mcc
>
> There isn't really flicker - thi is the way I watch movies all the
> time on TV (Plasma and LCD) and monitor. Motion can sometimes be
> slightly jerky (very slight). This is why they come out with 120Hz
> (and even 240 I have seen). You shouldn't see any 'distortion)', only
> slight temporal inconsistencies.
--
/re
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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