A/V Receivers and Lag
-
bobrocks95
- Posts: 3663
- Joined: Mon Apr 30, 2012 2:27 am
- Location: Kentucky
A/V Receivers and Lag
I've asked about it before in passing, but I wanted to start a thread to see if anything more official could be said on the topic, especially since I would think it's of interest to people- if you're seeking video perfection, you should also invest in a decent audio system too!
Do A/V Receivers add notable lag to the processing chain?
This is of course talking about pure passthrough without any sort of upscaling applied (receiver upscaling is likely tailored for movies and horrible for games), so generally it's in the realm of 720p/1080i/p HDMI inputs.
Anything sub 480p I would leave up to an external processor, I'm sure people could agree there.
Analog-to-digital conversion info through component inputs would be informative too, but that's adding another variable on top.
Has anyone ever brought a Leo-Bodnar tester to a showroom and tested A/V Receivers, or maybe tested one they own? Are they lagless by design, like they should be, or are results all over the place?
I feel like asking on AVSforum wouldn't get me very far, they don't seem very gaming-centric at all. Curious to hear from anyone with something to add!
Do A/V Receivers add notable lag to the processing chain?
This is of course talking about pure passthrough without any sort of upscaling applied (receiver upscaling is likely tailored for movies and horrible for games), so generally it's in the realm of 720p/1080i/p HDMI inputs.
Anything sub 480p I would leave up to an external processor, I'm sure people could agree there.
Analog-to-digital conversion info through component inputs would be informative too, but that's adding another variable on top.
Has anyone ever brought a Leo-Bodnar tester to a showroom and tested A/V Receivers, or maybe tested one they own? Are they lagless by design, like they should be, or are results all over the place?
I feel like asking on AVSforum wouldn't get me very far, they don't seem very gaming-centric at all. Curious to hear from anyone with something to add!
PS1 Disc-Based Game ID BIOS patch for MemCard Pro and SD2PSX automatic VMC switching.
-
Guspaz
- Posts: 3242
- Joined: Tue Oct 06, 2015 7:37 pm
- Location: Montréal, Canada
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
I've read that some do, and often will have a setting to delay the audio to match the delay in the video. I can't give any specifics as I don't have any first-hand experience with that, and mine doesn't add any delay.
It's worth noting that not all setups require that the HDMI pass through the receiver: you can connect the TV's S/PDIF output to the receiver's coax or optical input.
It's worth noting that not all setups require that the HDMI pass through the receiver: you can connect the TV's S/PDIF output to the receiver's coax or optical input.
-
ZellSF
- Posts: 2726
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2012 11:12 pm
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
Mine has no lag. I consider this a non-issue anyway, since there's not exactly a shortage of cheap HDMI splitters and switchers from China available to solve this problem. You can also go with Guspaz's solution or use HDMI ARC.
A much worse issue is the AVRs that have video processing lag and force the same lag to be added on all their audio processing. I forgot which company was famous for this (it's one of the big ones).
A much worse issue is the AVRs that have video processing lag and force the same lag to be added on all their audio processing. I forgot which company was famous for this (it's one of the big ones).
-
BuckoA51
- Posts: 3424
- Joined: Sat Oct 02, 2010 10:08 am
- Location: Ireland
- Contact:
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
I tested a handful with Leo's tester (Cambridge Audio, Onkyo, Sony) and found no lag when image processing (if there was any) was turned off.
OSSC Forums - http://www.videogameperfection.com/forums
Please check the Wiki before posting about Morph, OSSC, XRGB Mini or XRGB3 - http://junkerhq.net/xrgb/index.php/Main_Page
Please check the Wiki before posting about Morph, OSSC, XRGB Mini or XRGB3 - http://junkerhq.net/xrgb/index.php/Main_Page
-
austin532
- Posts: 844
- Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2014 12:44 am
- Location: Arizona, US
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
I can confirm that there is no lag with the Sony AVR's. At least over HDMI. I believe Component is upscaled which would obviously cause lag.
Framemeister 240p scanline settings: http://shmups.system11.org/viewtopic.ph ... start=9600
-
Ji-L87
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 8:39 pm
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
I've got two Yamaha AVRs (one low-range and one low mid-range) of pretty recent vintage on which I haven't noticed any lag to speak of. Now, I haven't been playing shmups or rhythm games but mouse movement feels good and Wii U games feels snappy enough.
CHECKPOINT!
-
gray117
- Posts: 1235
- Joined: Fri Jul 25, 2008 10:19 pm
- Location: Leeds
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
It varies and is largely undocumented. But most should have a decent passthrough option.
I think onkyo about 5 years ago got a pretty bad rap for a line that seemed to universally add a delay to everything, and that criticism put a focus on all brands to minimise / eliminating receiver being blamed where avoidable and having a proper passthrough options if even if just to allow comparison/troubleshooting... Typically movie buffs will be adding a slight delay to audio on receiver settings to sync to their TV...
For gaming I simply prefer to breakout audio/optical cable and connect video straight to TV and/or upscaler/processor of choice and avoid receiver.
I think onkyo about 5 years ago got a pretty bad rap for a line that seemed to universally add a delay to everything, and that criticism put a focus on all brands to minimise / eliminating receiver being blamed where avoidable and having a proper passthrough options if even if just to allow comparison/troubleshooting... Typically movie buffs will be adding a slight delay to audio on receiver settings to sync to their TV...
For gaming I simply prefer to breakout audio/optical cable and connect video straight to TV and/or upscaler/processor of choice and avoid receiver.
-
zakruowrath
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Wed Dec 11, 2013 4:44 am
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
Same here, my PS3, Xbox 360, N64 & XRGB Mini are connected to my Yamaha RX-S600 AVR and there's no noticeable lag what so ever.Ji-L87 wrote:I've got two Yamaha AVRs (one low-range and one low mid-range) of pretty recent vintage on which I haven't noticed any lag to speak of. Now, I haven't been playing shmups or rhythm games but mouse movement feels good and Wii U games feels snappy enough.
-
Ji-L87
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 8:39 pm
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
Yeah, that one looks like the slimline version of the ones I have (an HTR-3066 and RX-V679).zakruowrath wrote:Same here, my PS3, Xbox 360, N64 & XRGB Mini are connected to my Yamaha RX-S600 AVR and there's no noticeable lag what so ever.
Always liked the form factor of those slim lines models.
CHECKPOINT!
-
ZellSF
- Posts: 2726
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2012 11:12 pm
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
AVRs biggest crime would be if they added audio lag and as I said one manufacturer had a reputation for doing that.
That's not necessarily something you would notice outside of playing games heavily reliant on audio cues.
That's not necessarily something you would notice outside of playing games heavily reliant on audio cues.
-
Unseen
- Posts: 738
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2014 8:12 pm
- Contact:
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
Oh, but they do. They even let you choose how much they add, the option is usually called "speaker distance".ZellSF wrote:AVRs biggest crime would be if they added audio lag
GCVideo releases: https://github.com/ikorb/gcvideo/releases
-
ZellSF
- Posts: 2726
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2012 11:12 pm
Re: A/V Receivers and Lag
Good pointUnseen wrote:Oh, but they do. They even let you choose how much they add, the option is usually called "speaker distance".ZellSF wrote:AVRs biggest crime would be if they added audio lag
But I'm obviously talking outside of that lag.