April 27 2004 at 6:07 PM
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Looks like a 1920x1080 DLP chip is expected to be available late this year. Might give the venerable CRT RPTVs a run for their money. See the xHD3 chip down the page at:
http://www.digiupdate.com/105_DLP_RPTV. ... oc62794043
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Allen
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 6:33 AM
Just saw the writeup on how this new xHD3 chip works for 720p and 1080p. New twist on interlaced/progressive scan.
This chip paints one half of the screen (left/right alternately) every 1/120th of a second, so you get a full screen every 1/60th of a second. For 1280 x 720 it paints 640x720 each time. For 1920x1080 it paints 960x1080 each time.
Interesting solution. Throws a new twist into the interlaced/progressive scan debate.
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Richard Fisher
(Login mastertechtv)
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 7:04 AM
Allen,
Digital displays do not write anything across anything, that is an anolog function of CRT. They are flash displays where the complete frame is displayed.
Can you direct me to this info you are referring to?
Thanks,
Richard F. Fisher
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Allen
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 8:59 AM
Sorry, Richard. I tend to use the term 'paint' loosely and I shouldn't.
The writeup was in the new TPV (The Perfect Vision magazine).
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Richard Fisher
(Login mastertechtv)
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 9:40 AM
We have been misled...
What else is new?
The new TI chips are NOT 1920X1080 but 960X1080 using the same interlace shift concept but in the horizontal plane. Very disappointing from a pure science aspect. While it does remove vertical interlace problems what others will be generated by this scheme? A moot question until we have them in our hands.
I will see if our resident equipment and technology guru Rodolpho has any input.
Richard F. Fisher
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Allen
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 10:24 AM
I wonder if the fact that it can do both sides of the screen in 1/60th of a second will make a difference (1/120th for each half)? With current vertical interlacing it takes 1/30th of a second, so at least this is twice as fast.
The TPV guys seemed as surprised as anybody about this disclosure - they were apparently expecting a true 1920x1080 as well.
Thank god I'm not a videophile. This stuff is technically interesting to me but doesn't really bother me from a consumer standpoint. Sometimes ignorance truly is bliss.
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Richard Fisher
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 10:32 AM
>>Thank god I'm not a videophile.
Allen, you sure know enough to be one...
The test on this display will be vertical pans rather than horizontal.
This message has been edited by mastertechtv on Apr 28, 2004 10:38 AM
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Allen
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 12:10 PM
I guess you could call me an information-phile. I just have to know how things work and why. But when it comes down to audio and video performance I'm just not that picky. I work with 2 audiophiles and they are NEVER happy - they're in a never ending quest for perfection that they'll never achieve. But that won't stop them from spending thousands of dollars trying. You reach a point where the quality really doesn't get better - it just gets different.
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Richard Fisher
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 12:41 PM
>>You reach a point where the quality really doesn't get better - it just gets different.
Never thought about it that way. That is an astute observation!
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Ken - KQ6QV
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Re: 1920X1080 DLP
No score for this post April 28 2004, 6:29 PM
I
1920X1080 DLP
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How can it be stationary? It has to move to shift the picture one pixel every 1/120th of a second. That's why it's there. That's why it's called the interlace mirror. Now it only moves one pixel but it still moves.Hugh wrote:Now I know what you are talking about. I don't know the answer but I thought that mirror was stationary. In the example furnished by TI for the three chip version I don't see an interlace mirror.
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I'm still trying to find a mirror that could possibly make a noise having to do with this chip or the projection of the picture. If you go to the following TI site there is a good demo of how this all works:
http://www.dlp.com/dlp_technology/dlp_t ... erview.asp
From there you can download a zip file that will give you a large "picture" of the various parts. If there is a mirror, other than the ones on the chip, I would like for someone to tell me where it is located.
http://www.dlp.com/dlp_technology/dlp_t ... erview.asp
From there you can download a zip file that will give you a large "picture" of the various parts. If there is a mirror, other than the ones on the chip, I would like for someone to tell me where it is located.
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