|
|
|
|
|
by BlurBusters
543 days ago
|
|
You need more Hz to reduce display motion blur. - 120Hz = can reduce motion blur by up to 50% - 240Hz = can reduce motion blur by up to 75% - 480Hz = can reduce motion blur by up to 87.5% There's a new article on Blur Busters that's showing 120Hz-vs-480Hz OLED is more human visible than 60Hz-vs-120Hz, and easier to see than 720p-vs-1080p, and also why pixel response (GtG) needs to be 0 instead of 1ms, since that's like a camera shutter slowly opening & closing, but MPRT is equivalent to the shutter fullopen time. The science & physics is fascinating, including links to TestUFO animations that teaches about display motion blur and framerate physics. Motion blur of flicker = pulsewidth Motion blur of flickerless = frametime So you need tons of framerate or short pulsewidth BFI/CRT/etc. |
|