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  • DVD TV Out Problem

    Hi
    I have a G400 32mb Dualhead card with the second output connected to my
    widescreen TV & I have a small although rather annoying problem.
    I have a PAL TV as I live in the UK yet if I select PAL as the TV standard
    the DVD playback stutters about once every couple of seconds.
    If I select NTSC then there is no stutter, although the display is very
    flickery as it would be because this is not the right TV standard.
    This is not just on the TV but on the monitor as well. I have tried 2
    software players the Matrox one that is bundled with the card & PowerDVD yet
    the stuttering problem exists on both.
    This has me stumped.
    Any ideas
    Dave

  • #2
    Hi Dave.

    I don't know much about this myself, but I have the same problem, and I have been told by someone who seemed to know a lot about it, that when you play back an NTSC (e.g. region 1) DVD on a PAL tv, that stuttering is very hard to avoid. It is created when the NTSC framerate is converted to the PAL framerate.

    I have had some success myself using a software player using the surface flip mode "Soft-DeInterlace". The Matrox DVD player will do this if you get DVD Genie (www.inmatrix.com). It requires a mighty powerful machine though (my 558 MHz is on the low side).

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    • #3
      Thanks for replying
      Ill give it a try
      failing that i will buy a desktop player.
      Its a lot less hassle.

      Dave

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      • #4
        Dave - Are you playing region 1 DVDs or PAL DVDs. I thought, by default, that you were playing PAL DVDs. If you are indeed playing NTSC DVDs, you will never get away from this anomaly of skipping frames since NTSC plays at 60 Hz and PAL plays at 50 Hz. Have you tried PAL DVDs?

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        • #5
          Dave Carter!

          I use the G400 for displaying DVD's on a LCD projector but became curious about your problem and how different DVD's would look on our Sony Wega Trinitron widescreen TV.
          As Kruse and Brian R. already has said, this is caused by different framrates (PAL is 25 fps, NTSC is 24), and refresh rates (50 Hz vs. 60 Hz).
          However, most modern TV sets sold in Europe sopports more than just PAL. There is something called PAL 60 wich is a compromise, (25 fps but displayed at 60 Hz). If your TV set is bought within the last 3-4 years it is also likely to support pure NTSC material. If so, then you sould select NTSC in your SW DVD player AND adjust your TV set accordingly, (look in the manual or play around in the TV sets OSD). Just make sure your TV set supports 3.58 MHz NTSC (3.58 MHz is the carrier freq. used in American NTSC, there are other/older iterations of NTSC of wich 4.45 seems to be the one with most support in Europe. I think it is used by some older game consoles.)
          If your manual dosen't say anything about NTSC, contacnt your dealer and ask for detailed information or ask for the service manual.

          Thank You // Bond

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          • #6
            Pal 60 is avalible on the Creative DXR3 decoder card, it does indeed work albeit causing a little bit of flicker on my ageing TV.

            BTW Bond, NTSC runs at 30fps not 24 - that's the speed at which Cinema film runs.

            The stuttering is caused because when you convert a region 1 disc to PAL, the system has to drop the extra 5 frams per sec somehow. The solution under many DVD players is to simply drop the frames then and there - hence the stuttering, More advanced players such as the Hollywood Plus Hardware Decoder software are more subtle, they still drop frames, but not 5 at once. This makes the video look smoother.

            Pal 60 forces your TV to accept a 60HZ input. This allows the full 30FPS (remember that TV is interlaced - so 2 fields = 1 frame) to be displayed on your television. This is in fact the same technique used by Multisystem PAL VC R's when they play NTSC tapes. Unfortunetely, older Televiaions, and cheeper new models don't like PAL-60 very much. In a worse case scenario, you'll get a rolling picture, at second best your picture will flicker.

            [This message has been edited by Damien Green (edited 03 May 2000).]
            What do you want a signature for?

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            • #7
              Damien Green!

              I am sorry for not beeing clear enough. I thought we where talking about the source material (=DVD's), PAL DVD's (wich is 25 fps) versus NTSC DVD's (wich is 24 fps).
              I'm fully aware of the differences between our TV systems and the many shortcomings of them. That's why i use the PC to generate true progressive scan (= non interlaced) DVD video for my projector @ 72 Hz refresh rate for NTSC DVD's (3*24) and 75 Hz for PAL DVD's (3*25), always @ 960*540. It gives a picture quality WAY SUPERIOR to anything offered by any regular set top DVD player displayed on any front view CRT TV-set! Go out and check the price of a set top DVD player capable of displaying true progressive scan video. There are not many of them around, but i think Sony has released one in the US (lots of $, >> 1k$).

              Also:
              Your TV set has to support PAL60 to display it correctly. Do not expect your HW to perform correctly if you feed it with something it does not support!

              And as always, i recomend those of you interested in Home Theatre to visit http://www.avsforum.com . Most participants deals with systems form 5-10k$ and counting, and many has discovered the advantages offered by SW PC DVD decoding for true progressive scan DVD playback. The searchable arcives should keep you busy for weeks... There are a lot af knowledged people around there.

              Some links related to this particular issue, (there are a lot more...):
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/002010.html
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/002569.html
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/002528.html
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/001581.html
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/001964.html


              And for those of you that still belives in HW decoders:
              http://www.avsforum.com/ubb/Forum12/HTML/001661.html

              Thank You // Bond

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