Fudoh wrote:Remember that it's an OLED, so you don't exactly get motion blur anyway, you just get the lower perceived motion resolution caused by sample & hold handling of the screen. The rolling scan is easier on the eyes compared to the 60Hz BFI you get on LCDs. It's also not causing any double images (at least I haven't noticed any yet, might need to check with 30fps content). Still MOST people will obviously prefer the flicker free mode.
Haven't tried the OLEDs in tate yet though. The Sonys have small feet, so I need to get a tate-able stand first.
Hope this is not old enough to be considered a necro bump. I recently got my hands on a BVM-F250, part of the same line of the PVM-2541. I'm trying to figure out how to activate the rolling scan. Is it only for interlaced signals? What is the setting called on the PVMs? Is it only usable via the i/p settings?
On the F250, when I feed it an interlaced signal, like 15khz 480i or a 1080i signal (only tested via HDMI), it is possible to turn on/off the "Interlace" function within the "Function Switch" menu. Enabling this function produces a look that is
very similar to interlaced content displayed on a CRT BVM. Is this the rolling scan in action?
When a progressive signal is displayed, the above function is disabled. Does that mean that for progressive signals it's not possible to enjoy the persistence blur clearing effect of the rolling scan?
On a separate matter, has anyone tried one of these with one of the analogue input options and tested sending "240p" 15khz signals to it? With how good the interlaced function looks, I imagine the "double strike" picture of "240p" content would look great, though when I sent it a 240p signal from a Raspberry Pi via HDMI I only got a wobbly and interlaced looking picture.