![]() ![]() ![]() A bit like how you only really see part of your field of view in detail but your brain reconstructs the rest. partly because your brain is doing some of its own reconstruction on the image as it's processing it. 24fps is a sweet spot because motion in the resulting image blurs just enough that it ends up with a strange dreamy quality which is forgiving of detail etc. ![]() Apparently due to the persistence of our visual perception, the minimum frame rate to reproduce convincing motion is around the low 20 fps. He also does a good job of explaining the reason movies use 24fps too. whole bits of Tom Cruise's body missing during a high motion rooftop scene, shimmering on non-moving edges: ![]() Vincent Teoh (HDTVtest on YouTube) has a good video which explains it, using examples of the artifacting e.g. And let's face it, if you've spent the money on an OLED, and are posting on Reddit, you are probably the type of person who will see them :) They are averaged and if you look more critically at areas of motion on screen you will see smudging and interpolation mistakes that will start to annoy you once you see them. However, you can't reconstruct frames that weren't there. Superficially the smoothed picture looks more fluid. For reference, I'm watching Game of Thrones on Blu-Ray, and my Blu-Ray player is a very old sony model, so maybe that has something to do with it? It's an OLED 55C7T. If I'm missing something horribly obvious then please enlighten me. Everything just says "it looks like a soap opera" or "it's less cinematic", but I don't really see how either of these things are true. Can someone tell me why in the world people say motion smoothing is a bad thing? I actually can't find any answers about this. After all, fast moving objects don't judder like that in real life, they just blur a little. With motion smoothing it looks more realistic to me. It judders so much that my eyes actually hurt. Turns out, I hate it without motion smoothing. I only recently started hearing about all this "motion smoothing" stuff, so I thought "hey, I'll turn TruMotion off and it'll be way better because everyone says how horrible motion smoothing is". So, I've had my OLED TV for quite some time. When requesting help for issues POST DETAILS, MODELS, & PICS.Many questions have already been answered, USE SEARCH & See FAQ's.Messaging Mods via their private inbox not via mod mail will result in a ban and your messages ignored. Common/Frequently Asked Posts answered by the FAQ may be removed. No META Posts or comments, please message the moderators through Modmail Instead. They can be removed at our discretion for any reason including but not limited to Off Topic posting (including Soundbars) & Misinformation. Moderators reserve the right to remove your post at our discretion. This also includes YouTube links allowed at Mod Discretion (Rtings & HDTVTEST are allowed)įor Amazon Links - ideally Amazon links are in the format - all the extra stuff after those 10 characters are not necessary. No Deals, Spam, Self Promotion, or Referral Links/Link Shortening (This includes Amazon Smile). Unsure what OLEDs are? An overview can be found at: This subreddit is for news and discussion of OLED displays, OLED lighting, etc. ![]()
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