Motion drag on my Magnavox 47" CFL LCD & LG 22" LED LC
When I watch an online video, DVD, Blu-ray, or play a video game with fast moving motion I am getting a video drag with two lines appearing across the screen sort of splitting the screens of both displays. Both my 47" Magnavox 47MF439B/F7 CFL LCD & 22" LG EW224T LED LCD display both in 1920x1080p/60Hz. I have gone over the settings in the AMD VISION Engine Control Center and can't find anything such setting for motion/video drag.
Actually what i was getting at was 60hz refresh. Do you know anyone with a 120hz set you can test on. Just about anything you're going to get graphic tear on video game at that high a rez unless your system is a really kickass gaming centered system with high end video card.
now with something like 1080P youtube video's, it could be a bandwidth issue[let the whole video come in before playing, if you still get graphics tear it could be your cpu/gpu limiting it] if it does it with a stand alone blu ray player hooked up with HDMI my guess is the set can't handle it.
UPGRADING the TV sets firmware may or may not fix the issue[check the manufacturers website to see if theres new firmware for it]
dvd536 I don't know of any body that has a display that does 120 frames per second.
AMD Phenom II X6 1090T Black Edition Thuban 3.2GHz Six-Core AMD Radeon HD 6870 Graphics 3 2TB internal SATA hard drives LG Internal SATA Blu-ray 12x Super Multi Blue LightScribe
and so forth........
I have the latest firmware for my Magnavox 47MF439B/F7 and the Philips BDP5506 3D Blu-ray player hooked to my Magnavox. It plays Blu-rays and DVD just fine. When using it as a PC display is when it has the problem.
As for YouTube I do let the video load before playing it but does no good.
I have checked and double checked over and over and over and over and over and over and the graphics card is set to 1920x1080p/60 frames per second.
reply to floydb1982 You can throw a 1000 Hz TV there and still have the problem. It is the source what creates this, not the display. The fact that the Blueray player does not show this is the proof.