Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)
49 minutes ago, FR4GGL3 said:

LG C2 maxes out on 120 Hz and is ideally driven a few FPS below that

A little OT, but why?

I know it's repeated over and over again, but it makes no sense whatsoever. When your display can drive 120 Hz why would it be of any use (apart from lower GPU usage) to stay below that? Or better phrased - not to match that.

Edited by Hiob
  • Like 1

"Muß ich denn jedes Mal, wenn ich sauge oder saugblase den Schlauchstecker in die Schlauchnut schieben?"

Posted
1 hour ago, Hiob said:

A little OT, but why?

First of all the TV is not exactly at 120 Hz it is 119.8 or something. And then there is the fluctuation of the rendered frames while it tries to sync via VRR. My personal experience is that its best kept at max 116 Hz in Order to not exceed the 119.8 Hz of the TV. Else there are people that can see the Tearing if the FPS are above the capability of the TV.

The other effect is the problem of VRR Flicker in black Regions. It gets way less if you set a limit to ~110 Hz max. Try it.

 

  • Like 1

14700K | MSI Z690 Carbon | Gigabyte 4090 Gaming OC | 64GB DDR5 6000 G.Skill Ripjaws S5 | Asus Essence STX 2 on a Violectric V90 Headphone amp and Fostex TH600 Headphones | LG 42 C227LA & Samsung C32HG70 | TrackIR 5 | Moza AB9 and Virpil Constellation Alpha Grip | Thrustmaster Warthog Throttle | VKB T-Rudder Pedals MK IV 

I only fool around the F-14 - and still having a hard time on it as there is so much to learn and so little time and talent. But I love it.

Posted
7 minutes ago, FR4GGL3 said:

Try it.

I did.

And In still think it's voodoo. Personally I get the best results with everything set to 120 Hz. But I don't want to start a fight over it. I was just interested in the reasoning.

"Muß ich denn jedes Mal, wenn ich sauge oder saugblase den Schlauchstecker in die Schlauchnut schieben?"

Posted

Okay then

14700K | MSI Z690 Carbon | Gigabyte 4090 Gaming OC | 64GB DDR5 6000 G.Skill Ripjaws S5 | Asus Essence STX 2 on a Violectric V90 Headphone amp and Fostex TH600 Headphones | LG 42 C227LA & Samsung C32HG70 | TrackIR 5 | Moza AB9 and Virpil Constellation Alpha Grip | Thrustmaster Warthog Throttle | VKB T-Rudder Pedals MK IV 

I only fool around the F-14 - and still having a hard time on it as there is so much to learn and so little time and talent. But I love it.

Posted
On 10/18/2024 at 5:22 AM, FR4GGL3 said:

First of all the TV is not exactly at 120 Hz it is 119.8 or something. And then there is the fluctuation of the rendered frames while it tries to sync via VRR. My personal experience is that its best kept at max 116 Hz in Order to not exceed the 119.8 Hz of the TV. Else there are people that can see the Tearing if the FPS are above the capability of the TV.

I do exactly the same thing for the same reason. I find 117 to be about right.

i9-14900KS | ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 HERO | 64GB DDR5 5600MHz | iCUE H150i Liquid CPU Cooler | ASUS TUF GeForce RTX 4090 OC | Windows 11 Home | 2TB Samsung 980 PRO NVMe | Corsair RM1000x | LG 48GQ900-B 4K OLED Monitor | CH Fighterstick | Ch Pro Throttle | CH Pro Pedals | TrackIR 5

Posted (edited)
On 10/18/2024 at 12:33 PM, Hiob said:

I did.

And In still think it's voodoo. Personally I get the best results with everything set to 120 Hz. But I don't want to start a fight over it. I was just interested in the reasoning.

This seems to be a TV thing, because I never needed to do that, or heard about people doing that, on a computer monitor. I have one which runs at 144Hz and never had tearing running exactly at that value. FreeSync should fix any tearing issues, anyway.

It probably helps that a gaming monitor is designed for gaming, while a TV is designed, well, for watching TV, which usually doesn't run at 120Hz. So I suspect a monitor is going to be better in that regard.

Edited by Dragon1-1
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...