Hey, it's your problem. I like my panning shots.If you get it working I would be very interested. Panning shots really annoy me. You wonder why directors allow them to be used when they will look so poor.
Well, I was talking about the problem with 3:2 pulldown, since this was specifically mention in the OPI think we are talking about 2 different things. Motion interpolation is for extra frames per second.
Blu-Ray can be 24, 50 or 60hz depending on the source material. Films are 24p (or 23.976) becuase that is the speed they are shot at, and it doesn't look jerky to me. Unless every film ever made has had jerky panning and I've managed not to notice.Blu-ray has 24 frames per second. This is not smooth. No hardcore gamers would put up with 24fps in games so why should film watchers put up with it?
Reclock is filter that sits in the DirectShow decoding pipeline and adjusts the framerate and audio (or something), so it should work.
Well, I was talking about the problem with 3:2 pulldown, since this was specifically mention in the OP
Blu-Ray can be 24, 50 or 60hz depending on the source material. Films are 24p (or 23.976) becuase that is the speed they are shot at, and it doesn't look jerky to me. Unless every film ever made has had jerky panning and I've managed not to notice.
Blu-Ray can be 24, 50 or 60hz depending on the source material. Films are 24p (or 23.976) becuase that is the speed they are shot at, and it doesn't look jerky to me. Unless every film ever made has had jerky panning and I've managed not to notice.
Not enough information. My immediate guess would be that you're running Vista of Windows 7 and Reclock is not UAC compatible.Any idea what I need to do to fix that error with it? It's my main gripe with bluray playback so would love some nice smooth shots![]()
They don't make it easy to find do they
24 Hz is the refresh rate (how many times the screen will refresh the picture every second). FPS is the recording/playback rate. You are correct, they aren't the same. Your monitor is capable of 80+ Hz refresh probably, but certainly surfing the web isn't utilising even 1 FPS.I think there is a distinction between Hz and fps. 24 hz is not 24fps I dont think...
Anywho you are right the OP was not complaining about the thing wot I thought he was.
Anyone interested in motion interpolation and the problems caused by 24 fps filming. See The Big Judder Problem.