Poor rendering of high movement

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  • setite
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2005
    • 28

    #1

    Poor rendering of high movement

    I am not knowledgeable enough to know what this effect is. In full screen watching star wars ep1 2 or 3 whenever a shuttle is nearing a planet the planet moves across the screen incompletely.. in sections.... is this an interlacing issue or something else? and whatever it is.. how do i fix it... im in windows xp mce, full screen on mce front... nvidia 6800gt... on a panasonic ae700... i dont know if its the display or not...
  • setite
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2005
    • 28

    #2
    ok now i think i see why people use powerstrip... ive been tinkering with the hdtv modes included with my video card drivers and the problem is now bareable...

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    • PewterTA
      Super Senior Member
      • Nov 2004
      • 2900

      #3
      Most likely it's your processor or software you are using that is unable to keep up with the framerate at full screen processing. I have the Nvidia 6800GT and the movie works perfectly fine for me in full screen.

      What speed is your processor (I'm going to guess this is okay considering the Video card you have)...and what program are you using to watch the DVD at full screen?

      What software are you using to play the DVDs with?
      Digital Audio makes me Happy.
      -Dan

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      • wildfire99
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2005
        • 257

        #4
        In sections? This sounds like the scene in Ep2 where Obi-wan is in his little a-wing ship thing and going towards the red jupiter-like planet. That scene is a fantastic one for checking tearing, since the planet takes up so much of the screen and is a relatively smooth surface. I suspect what you're describing is tearing. It happens when you don't have v-sync enabled, and the monitor refreshes the screen while the video card/software is still drawing to the buffer. You get half of one frame and half of another.

        Enable v-sync and the problem should disappear. If the image motion itself is jerky/juddery, then it's a processing power problem.

        Here's a sample of the aforementioned scene, that I faked to demonstrate tearing (call me an overachiever):

        - Patrick
        "But it's more fun when it doesn't make sense!"

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        • PewterTA
          Super Senior Member
          • Nov 2004
          • 2900

          #5
          Wildfire you're an overachiever. :P
          Digital Audio makes me Happy.
          -Dan

          Comment

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