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SageTV Media Extender Discussion related to any SageTV Media Extender used directly by SageTV. Questions, issues, problems, suggestions, etc. relating to a SageTV supported media extender should be posted here. Use the SageTV HD Theater - Media Player forum for issues related to using an HD Theater while not connected to a SageTV server. |
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#21
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FWIW any TV with proper 24p support (i.e. a clean multiple of 24 - 48/72/96/etc) will do; 120/240 Hz are LCD specific applications of this idea.
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#22
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I'm pretty sure mine it not one. I did try 1080p24 and it said it was unsupported when I switched the HD200.
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Server: i5 8400, ASUS Prime H370M-Plus/CSM, 16GB RAM, 15TB drive array + 500GB cache, 2 HDHR's, SageTV 9, unRAID 6.6.3 Client 1: HD300 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia 65" 1080p LCD and optical SPDIF to a Sony Receiver Client 2: HD200 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia NS-LCD42HD-09 1080p LCD |
#23
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That's great.
I'll hang on to this info as it may be useful once I get my clearly different and much more severe problem resolved. Quote:
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Server: PhenomII X4 810, 16GB, 4850, C: 256GB Samsung SSD, D: HGST 3TB, E: HGST 4TB, H: 3T Seagate, 1.5 TB on NAS via UNC, Win 10 x64, Sage 9 Cable provider is Comcast, Schedules Direct Tuners: 4 ATSC - 2 seperate HD Homeruns all via Channel Master CM2016 on roof, 6 cable via 2 hdhomerun primes (opendct), 1 HD-PVR (in tuner priority order) Clients: Wired: HD300, HD200, HD200 running Squeeze Slave, Placeshifters, HD200 (via wireless N bridge) |
#24
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I'm a bit confused by this thread - does this fix just apply to PAL or is it necessary/appropriate for non-PAL (NTSC)? I haven't enabled any custom resolutions and I think Blu Ray playback on the HD200 seems fine (at 1080p), but maybe I'm missing something?
thanks Billl |
#25
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If you care enough to have a 1080p24 capable display, then I'd say it's very useful for even "NTSC" people. Though I think "NTSC" people are more accustomed to the 3:2 cadence judder than PAL people so it's often not thought about.
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#26
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Quote:
But this only applies to where the source material is theatrical film (or film analog) originally made to play back in cinemas at 24fps, and where the authoring has been done 'properly' (ie frame-for-frame at 24hz). The experience will be a lot different where the source is, for example, video (ie made-for-tv), film-made-for-TV, etc. Also, things get even more complicated when the people creating the Bluray get "creative" with their production (ie telecine the source material before encoding to disk), or where the source has come via 'questionable' channels before being cut to disk (ie there's no knowing how many times the source has been interlaced, de-interlaced, telecined, and de-telecined, etc). AFAIK, all 'proper' film -> bluray transfers are done full frame (ie non-interlaced), frame-for-frame, at 24hz (ie film rate). At least, all the ones I've seen so far. So, if you are in an NTSC region, and if you have a bluray of a film that has been 'properly' encoded, then you will be experiencing the movie with telecine judder whereby the HD200 doubles up frames every few frames in order to stretch out the visual content to match the original film (and so that the audio doesn't sound either like chipmunks or peopletalkingatnormalpitchjustveryveryfast). Effectively what happens is that rather than seeing film frames: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 (half a second at 24hz) You're seeing something like: 1 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 8 8 9 10 11 12 12 (half a second at 30hz) The experience is sort of like: ----x----x----x----x----x---> Where the - is smooth pan, the x is a little 'tick' where the visual 'hangs' for a fraction of a second. The above is a bit over-simplified (and ignores all the other fun and games that happens when inverse telecine, line doubler, deinterlace etc processes get in the way), but you get the idea... This is especially noticeable on panning shots (ie intro car race in Indianna Jones / Crystal Skull -- especially on vertical pan behind atomic cafe sign and next scene with static landscape and cars/trucks driving up to checkpoint -- the cars visibly jump). Check out the link at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecine for more info --> "Telecine judder... The “2:3 pulldown” telecine process creates a slight error in the video signal compared to the original film frames... This is one reason why films viewed on typical NTSC home equipment may not appear as smooth as when viewed in a cinema. The phenomenon is particularly apparent during slow, steady camera movements which appear slightly jerky when telecined. This process is commonly referred to as telecine judder". Applying the 'fix' (and assuming your display supports 24/72/200hz) gives you back the frame-for-frame playback, and panning shots etc are super smooth. If I were you, I'd give it a try. Took about 5 minutes from go to whoa to apply the 'fix' (once I'd worked out what to do), and made a significant difference for me. Bottom line, original source material, how it was captured, how it was processed and stored, plus a number of post-processing factors (such as in the amp / processor / TV) all interact to give you the final picture. In some cases it doesn't work out, and things look terrible, sometimes it doesn't look too bad, sometimes it looks great. And sometimes the viewer doesn't notice or care. So... it depends. Try a couple of different combinations, see if they make a difference, and settle for what makes you happy Hope this helps, cheers! |
#27
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Thanks for the excellent and detailed explanation.
I enabled the fix as described earlier in this thread, and it looks like my tv (a samsung plasma) supports 1080/24p - which is good. When watching a blu-ray rip, I have to say the difference is subtle but noticeable, especially when the camera pans. Of course, now I have a related question. Is there any advantage/disadvantage to leaving the extender in this mode when watching a standard DVD movie (film based) rip? A little bit of testing I've done, but I really can't see anything wrong with the video when playing standard DVD files using this output format. Again, am I missing something? thanks again Bill |
#28
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Unless you've got a very nice video processor (which seems rather rare), it's probably not going to do anything for you with DVDs. The problem with them is they're "encoded as" 480i60, or put it another way, they're encoded for 480i60 playback, so that's how the extender recognizes/detects them.
That's assuming you've got 480i output enabled. If you don't then it's probably OK for most DVDs, but for video/mixed DVDs, the result will be quite bad. |
#29
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You're welcome
Quote:
So I did the following:
So now it works nicely for me -- HD200 picks appropriate resolution by source, de-interlaces TV and DVD for me, and gives me lovely 24fps Bluray. Give it a go & see what you think. Cheers! |
#30
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I am about to give up on the 24p playback with hd100 or HD200.
I have an open support ticket with SageTV. I wonder if the hardware is just a bit older. Just got an Asus O!Play from frys with the intention to return it. It has in the menu and plays 24P perfect. Not as good as my PS3 but close enough. I wonder if the asus has better hardware then the sagetv??? If so we need a HD300 soon!!!!! Last edited by impro; 02-03-2010 at 02:38 AM. |
#31
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MrFusion, I noticed you switched your custom resolution to 23.976 per the code above, versus what you initially were using (@24). I also notice you paired that with 1080p24 instead of 1080p23. why and why? just curious if you noticed any differences.
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#32
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For what it's worth, I did some unscientific testing, comparing the 1080p24 vs 1080p23 setting... and I'm getting better results in scenes with motion and pan with 1080p23.
This is viewing 23.976 fps material on a Panasonic plasma at 96k refresh. And I have no idea why. |
#33
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Quote:
let talk. I have not had any luck with 24p with my v10 |
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