Hopwin wrote:
Am I confused? Why are we talking about FPS? 60hz versus 120hz is about refresh rate. How quickly the image on the screen transitions to the next frame. When watching sports or action-scenes on my 60hz Bravia I end up with a blurred transition, when watching the same scenes on a 120hz TV the transition is smooth and clean, the image maintains its integrity from frame to frame.
So yes the input may be limited to 24-30 FPS but how quickly and cleanly the images are presented makes all the difference.
Again I may be confused so feel free to correct me
FPS and Refresh Rate are essentially the same thing, although they originate on different devices. While Refresh Rate
is the rate at which the display refreshes the next frame, FPS represents how quickly the image source (such as a blu-ray player, game console or a satellite decoder box)--which supplies those frames--transitions to the next frame. It is another type of refresh rate. The total rate of refresh is only as high as the the lowest point in the bottleneck, minus a bit for synchronization. The display cannot show more distinct frames than the image source is capable of sending it, nor can the image source force the display to show more frames than it's capable of displaying.
For example, if your monitor refreshes at 120Hz, and your video card only sends 55 FPS, your total refresh rate from one frame to the next is slightly less than 55FPS. If your monitor refreshes at 60 Hz, but your framerates are 85 FPS, your actual refresh rate is going to be just under 60 FPS.
It's very possible your source for sports is greater than 60Hz. I've heard they really ramp up the framerates for live sporting events.