franin Posted April 2, 2007 Posted April 2, 2007 I would love to know if Blu-ray Region A run at a diffent frame rate then Blu-ray Region B.I was told that Region A was better,but i cannot confirm that if it's true.
cwt Posted April 2, 2007 Posted April 2, 2007 I would love to know if Blu-ray Region A run at a diffent frame rate then Blu-ray Region B.I was told that Region A was better,but i cannot confirm that if it's true. Ide imagine so FRANIN; Wikepedia lists both 1080i 50 and 60 frame rates as well as 24p.All bets are off If this refers to video and not film :wacko:If separate frame rates exist the 60 frame output would have 3/2 pulldown judder and the 50 4% speed up as exists for ntsc and pal dvd's i'de imagine.Sooner 24p comes the better
sulimo Posted April 2, 2007 Posted April 2, 2007 I assumed that they were the same. All 1080p/24. Of course I completely forgot about TV content. I assumed HD shows were recorded in the same format and just converted down for broadcast. Not that I'm sure I'd notice the difference between 1080i/50 or 1080i/60. After all I've generally preferred PAL DVDs over NTSC ones.
AndrewW Posted April 2, 2007 Posted April 2, 2007 My understanding is that all the discs are encoded at 24fps. There is no difference between a Region A and Region B disc. It is up to the player how they are output to the display. Andrew.
migrane Posted April 3, 2007 Posted April 3, 2007 My understanding is that all the discs are encoded at 24fps.There is no difference between a Region A and Region B disc. It is up to the player how they are output to the display. Andrew. And all players currently output at 60Hz. Most of the current Region B player manuals contain statements that a firmware update will be required to play at 50Hz, should 50Hz source material come along.
cwt Posted April 3, 2007 Posted April 3, 2007 My understanding is that all the discs are encoded at 24fps.There is no difference between a Region A and Region B disc. It is up to the player how they are output to the display. Andrew. When I mentioned 24p output I should have clarified they are encoded as 1080p/24 indeed Andrew
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