Gaming Forums => General Gaming => Topic started by: kennyb27 on April 11, 2003, 12:34:05 PM
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: kennyb27 on April 11, 2003, 12:34:05 PM
Is 60 frames per second really possible with analog TV sets? For regular analog sets, the electron beam paints the phosphor coating at a rate of 30 frames per second (2 "paintings": 1st for all the odd lines, then 2nd for the even lines, about 480 visible lines overall). So with a game that brags 60 F/S...is that really possible on a analog display(that is, other than Liquid Crystal, High-Definition, or Plasma display)?
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: oohhboy on April 12, 2003, 01:24:06 AM
Here we go again. 60FPS means 60 fields per second, not frames per second. Two fields is needed to make up one frame as analog tvs only display half the picture with each pass. In P-scan, the entire frame is drawn in one go. The resulting effec is a cleaner picture.
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: Sir Kero on April 27, 2003, 10:39:11 AM
To be more technically accurate (I think..) 60 fps games are rendered at 60 frames a second, but analog TVs only display 60 half frames a second (30 odd line frames and 30 even line frames). The result still looks smoother than a game running at 30fps, as any fan of F-Zero X can attest.
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: Locke Cole on April 27, 2003, 01:54:31 PM
I thought the human eye can only process up to 30 frames per second.
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: PIAC on April 27, 2003, 11:13:05 PM
thats why i got my self an extra set of eyes
Title: 60 frames per second...really?
Post by: Sir Kero on April 29, 2003, 12:43:37 PM
Alot of people think that. I was remembering it being 70fps for some reason.. we're both wrong as this article explains.
If you don't like reading, then I'll just cut to the chase, the human eye doesn't work in a system of frames, but a continuous stream. There is no limit to how many frames per second you can see until you start dealing with how fast your brain can interpret the signal.