Your explanation pleases me. Now if you can tell me why my 480p signal is interlaced in this same tv. That would be great.Josh128 wrote:With my earlier post, Im agreeing with you-- the set is actually line doubling the 240p and displaying it in a 480 line frame. It is technically recognizing and displaying it as 480i though-- but because the 240p fields are not alternating, but sent to the set 60 times a second, it is actually line doubling that 240p/60 to 480i/60, but since the line doubled fields are not changing, what you actually end up with is equivalent to a 480p image!FinalBaton wrote:I meant that when he says "the lines become still", what he sees on his TV at that moment is a 480 progressive scan image. Not a 240p image.Josh128 wrote:Probably line doubling 240p to 480i, hence what the service menu says. Since the active 240p lines are doubled and dont contain any different picture info-- the "vibrating" lines of actual 480i content will not occur. This is par for the course for consumer HDCRT sets.
I have yet to see any consumer HD sets that will actually change to 15kHz and display only 240 active lines. I dont believe anything outside of certain broadcast monitors was ever made that can do that.
Cause SFP tubes can't display 240p. Lowest they go is 480 interlaced and 480 progressive.
My old TC P50X60 plasma used to handle 240p the same way-- it would kick the set into 480i mode, but unless you actually fed the set 480i, you did not get the "vibrating" fields.![]()
My tv is the Sony KV-34XBR910