antorsae
05-18-07, 12:35 PM
After having seen 72 Hz and 60 Hz on my Marquees, I wonder what you guys are running with your CRTs...
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View Full Version : What refresh rate are you running on your CRT? antorsae 05-18-07, 12:35 PM After having seen 72 Hz and 60 Hz on my Marquees, I wonder what you guys are running with your CRTs... ChrisWiggles 05-18-07, 01:36 PM 1440x720p72 Jesse S 05-18-07, 01:53 PM 71.928 imprez25 05-18-07, 02:23 PM 59.9hz only because I can't find a way to change it. nidi 05-18-07, 02:27 PM 71.928 Jesse, 71.928Hz on 1080P ? if yes, what equipment are you using ? Michael nidi 05-18-07, 02:31 PM 1440x960P @ 71.93 Hz 1440x864P @ 75 Hz 1920x1080 @ 48 Hz 1920x1080 @ 50 Hz 1920x1080 @ 60 Hz and crippled with image shakes and/or sync issues 1440x1152 @75Hz 1920x1080 @71.93Hz 1920x1080 @75Hz please give my perfect 3:3 soon! Michael Fussy viewer 05-18-07, 03:27 PM These days the LCD has pretty well taken over as the standard computer monitor technology. As far as I know, all LCD monitors run at 60Hz refresh. Due to the inherently slower response of LCDs compared to CRTs, this does not cause noticeable flickering or eye strain. If you still want to know however, back when I had a CRT, I kept it at 85Hz. nashou66 05-18-07, 03:58 PM These days the LCD has pretty well taken over as the standard computer monitor technology. As far as I know, all LCD monitors run at 60Hz refresh. Due to the inherently slower response of LCDs compared to CRTs, this does not cause noticeable flickering or eye strain. If you still want to know however, back when I had a CRT, I kept it at 85Hz. If hes a fussy Viewer he should switch to CRT !!! :D Athanasios Person99 05-18-07, 03:59 PM These days the LCD has pretty well taken over as the standard computer monitor technology. As far as I know, all LCD monitors run at 60Hz refresh. Due to the inherently slower response of LCDs compared to CRTs, this does not cause noticeable flickering or eye strain. If you still want to know however, back when I had a CRT, I kept it at 85Hz. You don't understand this poll at all. If you would have asked what it was about, we would have told you. Further, this is not a computer site, but a home theater site, that is the context of the poll. Given how little you understand about home theater, I'm guessing you use a digital display in your home theater, right? :) Dave kschmit2 05-18-07, 04:56 PM 95.904 Hz antorsae 05-18-07, 05:09 PM 95.904 Hz Deinterlaced? What resolution & projector? :) Mark_A_W 05-18-07, 06:38 PM 96hz and 100hz. Interlaced, like Kai, who's playing coy. Jon Spackman 05-18-07, 06:59 PM 1080p @60hz 9" crt Jesse S 05-18-07, 07:21 PM Jesse, 71.928Hz on 1080P ? if yes, what equipment are you using ? Michael 1280x720 on XG 1351LC. 1080p works but until I ceiling mount and do a serious setup I won't know if it's resolved enough. nidi 05-19-07, 07:30 AM 1280x720 on XG 1351LC. 1080p works but until I ceiling mount and do a serious setup I won't know if it's resolved enough. PC Graphicscard or Scaler ?? Michael MadMrH 05-19-07, 12:23 PM 2880x1200 @ 60Hz currently.................. Ive been working on refresh rates as well............ Depending on what the source is , or what is was originally recorded at or what the source player is outputting then I feel these 3 things change the refresh rate required for best performance. The above is if you are able to change perameters via a scaler. Im not currently running a HTPC as I dont have time.......... Im using 60Hz for NO real REASON (Im setting up other things at the mo), my current scaler offers 60,65,70,75,80 - its NOT a HT based unit, soon I hope to have 48 & 72 as an option and higher than 80 as well. Phil Smith 05-19-07, 05:19 PM I run 1080i@60 for HDTV and 720p@72 for DVD. I imagine there are a lot of people with similar setups, which leaves us with no choice in the poll. :( kschmit2 05-20-07, 05:40 AM of course the source material is deinterlaced prior to output. "Deinterlacing" mostly through software (Dscaler 5 w/IVTC mod), or not needed at all (BD and HD DVD playback). For video sourced HDTV stuff I use Nvidia's hardware deinterlacing. The video card re-interlaces the deinterlaced material prior to output. HTPC -> moome ISS-HD deronmoped 05-22-07, 02:03 AM I do 48 Hz for the increased bandwidth. Deron. AntC 05-22-07, 12:10 PM I run 1080i@60 for HDTV and 720p@72 for DVD. I imagine there are a lot of people with similar setups, which leaves us with no choice in the poll. :( +1, I generally do the same. Ant MYoung 05-22-07, 12:56 PM 47.952 Hz @ 1080p on my 1292Q fed from a VisionHDP and 59.94 Hz on my D50 (480p widescreen from Wii and 600p from HTPC) VideoGrabber 05-23-07, 01:21 AM Phil commented: > I run 1080i@60 for HDTV and 720p@72 for DVD. I imagine there are a lot of people with similar setups, which leaves us with no choice in the poll. < Why not? It's not a "pick one" poll. You can tag all 5, if you use multiple refreshes. Sounds like you just need 2. - Tim HenrikM 07-17-07, 05:47 PM 1440x1152@50hz (2xPAL) On a BG1209/2 napos 07-17-07, 06:53 PM My projector is an MP V2 modded Marquee 8500 and my scaler is a Lumagen Vision HDP. Sources are Toshiba AX1 and PS3. Since I am also in PAL-land (Greece), I use the following: For PAL DVD: 1080p@50Hz (1080i from PS3 to 1080p from Vision HDP) or 864p@75Hz (from 576i) For NTSC DVD (film based):1080p@47.95Hz (1080i from Toshiba AX1 to 1080p from Vision HDP) or 720p@47.95Hz (from 480i) For NTSC DVD (video based):1080p@59.94Hz (1080i from Toshiba AX1 to 1080p from Vision HDP) or 720p@59.94Hz (from 480i) For Sky HD: 1080p@50Hz For HD DVD and Blu Ray (Film based material): 1080p@47.95Hz For HD DVD and Blu Ray (Video based material): 1080p@59.94Hz Nicholas Gino AUS 07-17-07, 11:59 PM 2520x1050p71.925/75 Gary Murrell 07-18-07, 07:09 AM 1920x800p 60hz, 2.40:1 baby :cool: used 100% for films and still only 60hz, I do NOT like those film refresh rates at all -Gary Fellenz 07-18-07, 07:25 AM 1920x1080p 60hz 1440x808p 72hz 1280x720p 96hz Marquee 8000 Phil Smith 07-18-07, 09:30 AM Phil commented: > I run 1080i@60 for HDTV and 720p@72 for DVD. I imagine there are a lot of people with similar setups, which leaves us with no choice in the poll. < Why not? It's not a "pick one" poll. You can tag all 5, if you use multiple refreshes. Sounds like you just need 2. - TimYou're right. I didn't know polls could have multiple choice. I wish I'd known that before I voted. 1280x720p@72Hz 1920x1080i@60Hz Fredrik 07-18-07, 04:08 PM 1280x720 @ 71.927 (haven't been able to get it to .928 :)) or 75 for PAL. Jesse S 07-18-07, 07:32 PM 1920x800p 60hz, 2.40:1 baby :cool: used 100% for films and still only 60hz, I do NOT like those film refresh rates at all -Gary I dunno Gary, 60hz is judderama. I can't even stand the occasional frame drops when watching at 72.00hz Mark_A_W 07-18-07, 07:51 PM I dunno Gary, 60hz is judderama. I can't even stand the occasional frame drops when watching at 72.00hz Jesse if you are using a PC, try Reclock to fix the frame drops. And don't pester Gary, he's immune to judder. I have a mate here who moved from a 1292 to a Ruby and he can't see it either. Gino AUS 07-18-07, 08:14 PM used 100% for films and still only 60hz, I do NOT like those film refresh rates at all It's interesting that you like the forced 3:2 DI of the VP50 yet you still output 60Hz. Have you tried outputting 1080p48? |