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1st October 2017, 11:04 | #46122 | Link | |
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Examples are below, first what you should normally see in a 16:9 frame if the file is tagged with the correct ~1.458 pixel aspect ratio, and second what you'd see with MadVR's black bar detection enabled. Sadly, many PAL DVDs don't adhere to the standards (particularly films which are just encoded as 720x576 16:9, i.e. pixel aspect ratio of ~1.422), so it's kind of a crapshoot when deciding how to mux the videos properly when ripping them. P.S. The same thing applies to 4:3 PAL videos: only the centre 702 "lines" are meant to be part of the image stretched to 768, so for a 720x576 original image it should be 788x576 without any cropping.
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TV Setup: LG OLED55B7V; Onkyo TX-NR515; ODroid N2+; CoreElec 9.2.7 Last edited by DragonQ; 1st October 2017 at 11:13. |
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1st October 2017, 11:24 | #46123 | Link |
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Did I list that one as one of those that support it? No? Well then!
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LAV Filters - open source ffmpeg based media splitter and decoders |
1st October 2017, 12:15 | #46124 | Link | |
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In 24 Hz mode with real cinema enabled it has a very high amount of input lag. I have to set the audio delay in lav filters to around 90ms to get the audio in sync. |
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1st October 2017, 12:55 | #46125 | Link | |
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Does LG Real Cinema effect this ? it says Optimize display for movies. |
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1st October 2017, 13:44 | #46126 | Link |
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What's the difference between 'crop black bars' and 'if there are big black bars'? With the second I can effectively crop the bars away. What about the first?
Inviato dal mio ASUS_Z00LD utilizzando Tapatalk
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1st October 2017, 13:52 | #46127 | Link | |
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Last edited by Razoola; 1st October 2017 at 13:57. |
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1st October 2017, 15:43 | #46130 | Link | ||
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Shouldn't HDMI 1.3 display lag compensation (aka "Auto Lip Sync") take care of that? Or are modern TVs still too dumb to send the correct lag info to AVRs?
I've had that enabled since I got my AVR and it's working perfectly with my Panasonic GT60 (verified with a test clip with beeps synced to flashes). Quote:
EDIT: Quote:
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HTPC: Windows 10 22H2, MediaPortal 1, LAV Filters/ReClock/madVR. DVB-C TV, Panasonic GT60, Denon 2310, Core 2 Duo E7400 oc'd, GeForce 1050 Ti 536.40 Last edited by el Filou; 1st October 2017 at 15:51. |
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1st October 2017, 15:44 | #46131 | Link |
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Anyone tried sending HDR metadata through their receiver? I have RX-1040 which has HDMI 2.0, but is said to not support HDR since it doesn't support HDCP 2.2, but madVR has no HDCP. Afaik receivers should just "passthrough" everything to the TV except the audio but does this apply to HDR metadata? I'll test it when I get home unless anyone can enlighten me .
Last edited by XTrojan; 1st October 2017 at 15:46. |
1st October 2017, 16:12 | #46132 | Link | |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia...n_PureVideo_HD |
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1st October 2017, 16:22 | #46133 | Link | |
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LAV Filters - open source ffmpeg based media splitter and decoders |
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1st October 2017, 16:26 | #46134 | Link | |
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What's needed for HDR10 is HDMI 2.0a (or HDMI 2.0b, but HDMI 2.0 isn't enough), and no, all AVRs don't pass through BT2020/HDR info. For example, I had to get rid of my X5200W because it wouldn't pass through BT2020 content. I replaced it with a X7200WA which does, but doesn't pass through Dolby Vision until it gets a f/w update in the next few months. Of course you can always ask MadVR to convert HDR to SDR (which it does very well), and then any AVR/display will work.
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1st October 2017, 18:00 | #46136 | Link | |
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Edit: ARC equals S/PDIF, well that sucks, is the only option then buying a soundcard to the PC or buying a new receiver? Last edited by XTrojan; 1st October 2017 at 18:08. |
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1st October 2017, 18:12 | #46137 | Link | |
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1st October 2017, 18:29 | #46138 | Link | ||
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For me, upgrading the AVR made sense because my source is aa UB900 until we can rip our UHD Blurays. But if you plan to use a HTPC as a source, there are few reasons to upgrade anything in between. You have to realise that "HDR" only means applying the correct gamut/gamma. Ultimately, HDR displays convert to SDR. So asking MadVR to convert to SDR and send SDR to the display through the AVR is very similar. Sometimes, you can get more control with the calibration in the display, but MadVR does a great job especially if you're not a HDR calibration expert.
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1st October 2017, 18:34 | #46139 | Link |
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But the display tone-maps to what it can really display, while madVR tone-maps to sRGB, right?
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Tags |
direct compute, dithering, error diffusion, madvr, ngu, nnedi3, quality, renderer, scaling, uhd upscaling, upsampling |
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