Tv 60hz Vs 120hz Gaming: Full Version Software

Tv 60hz Vs 120hz Gaming: Full Version Software 9,6/10 1741 reviews

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Samsung UN48H6350 48-Inch 1080p 120Hz Smart LED TV. Gaming, this TV is the. Dumber' version of the tv. Buy ASUS ROG G752VS OC Edition Gaming Laptop, 17' 120Hz G-SYNC Full HD. I can have numerous software's open at the same time and this thing is like a.

It will, but not at 1080p with 60hz (per eye). You should look at the Samsung 750 or 950 models for the displayport connection required for AMD to support 1080p HD3D at 60hz. Unless AMD has added support for dual-link DVI, but last I have checked, AMD required frame packing that is not supported by DVI. EDIT: I noticed that the link you provided for the video card specifically mentions that the HDMI and displayports support stereoscopic 3D, and the DVI connection does not. This means that monitor will not work for you at 1080p assuming it even allows for HDMI 3D.

You're kinda out of luck, if you already own the monitor. You can do 24fps over HDMI, but otherwise you bought the wrong monitor. It's kinda sad that samsung sells that thing, I've seen a few other people land in the same situation. Though DualLink-DVI is worth a try and may actually work, seems to be pretty conflicting information. It does have the bandwidth to support the framerate needed, but it may not be supported for frame-sequential 3d in tridef.

On the upside, you should be able to keep a steady framerate, if you are capped at 24fps. I have a 7870, an i7 2700k, and s23a750d, and some games have trouble reaching 120fps in 3d in some games (looking at you skyrim). Nvidia isn't going to be any better. They require you to use their glasses and monitors to get frame-sequential mode.

(sorry for all the edits.). If there is a problem, it's going to be the monitor.

HDMI cannot support full framerate 3d. DL-DVI does support full framerate 3d (bandwidth wise), however it's questionable whether it's supported by AMD for Framesequential 3d. Your monitor isn't an Nvidia 3d-vision monitor, so your best case scenario in using an Nvidia card would by side-by-side 3d mode with tridef, which halves the resolution of the composed 3d image. If you want to know before you buy, contact AMD directly and ask 'Will an HD 7950 support frame sequential AMD HD3d at 120Hz (60FPS per eye) over dual link DVI?' If you have an AMD HD 5000 or newer video card and a dual link DVI cable, you can test this yourself using the trial version of Tridef, and see what framerate you get (note that tridef displays your framerate as fps per eye, so 60 fps means you're getting 60 left eye frames and 60 right eye frames); choose an older supported game with low cpu and gpu requirements and run at low settings so you can ensure it's maxing out framerate.

If you need a new video card anyway, AMD is going to give you the best results given the monitor you already own. The 7950 is a good choice, going for the 7970 however would not be a waste either though, I rather wish I had gotten a stronger GPU than the 7870 when I purchased. Yes HD3D works with all DVI as DVI is the same as HDMI but doesn't support High-def audio? You'll be fine? I use DVI now for 3D?

60hz Vs 75hz Gaming

If you read this it says to use 3D you need either DVI out, HDMI, or Displayport? Sorry, that is not true.

HDMI also supports a technology called frame packing. AMD had at least in the past, required the use of frame packing in their HD3D support. If you have watched any AMD setup videos, you'd know that they have always said it required HDMI 1.4a. More recently, they added displayport support, which also has frame packing.

That said, did AMD make a typo on that list, or have they added support for dl-dvi with HD3D and failed to make mention of it? I am not sure. Edit: for reference, late last year I bought a 3D monitor that supports 3D through DL-DVI and HDMI 1.4a but was limited to either 24hz or 720p. I had 6950's at the time. After testing it, and finding the DL-DVI connection would not work with HD3D, I found it would work with HDMI 1.4a. I also tried with a Displayport to dl-dvi active display converter, which did not work.

After a lot of research at the time, I learned it is not supported with DL-DVI on AMD. However, Nvidia's video cards did work with it, which is why I use Nvidia now.

But like I said, that is either a typo, requires special support by the Monitor, or AMD added new support for DL-DVI and no longer requires frame packing. Sorry, that is not true.

60hz

HDMI also supports a technology called frame packing. AMD had at least in the past, required the use of frame packing in their HD3D support.

If you have watched any AMD setup videos, you'd know that they have always said it required HDMI 1.4a. More recently, they added displayport support, which also has frame packing.

That said, did AMD make a typo on that list, or have they added support for dl-dvi with HD3D and failed to make mention of it? I am not sure. AMD HD3D has always supported DVI as i've been using it since HD5xxx series? Frame packing isn't needed. I looked into that 700D monitor and hd3d some time ago and on some forum posts I remember reading that you can tweak the TriDef3d software to recognise the monitor as generic 120Hz monitor and when connected with DL-DVI you can actually use it in 3d mode at 120Hz. You had to download the full version of the TriDef software and use that instead of the one that comes bundled with the monitor (since it is a stripped down AMD-version), same product key should work though. While it isn't completely official and a little bit on the illegal side, it was said that this method was suggested by a TriDef rep.

Gaming On 60hz Tv

I haven't tested it so don't know for sure if it works. Sounds plausible though. I looked into that 700D monitor and hd3d some time ago and on some forum posts I remember reading that you can tweak the TriDef3d software to recognise the monitor as generic 120Hz monitor and when connected with DL-DVI you can actually use it in 3d mode at 120Hz.

You had to download the full version of the TriDef software and use that instead of the one that comes bundled with the monitor (since it is a stripped down AMD-version), same product key should work though. While it isn't completely official and a little bit on the illegal side, it was said that this method was suggested by a TriDef rep. I haven't tested it so don't know for sure if it works. Sounds plausible though I attempted this with my monitor, and I did use Tridef, as AMD's solution requires it, or Iz3d (didn't work for me at all). Tridef worked with HDMI 1.4a but not dl-dvi.

Is 60hz Good For Gaming

This was around September, and the last time I tried was probably October. My guess is that perhaps the Monitor has some special hardware/software to mimic frame packing or AMD has more recently changed their requirements? I'll have try it myself.

My monitor has both dl-dvi and HDMI 1.4a and works with my Nvidia setup on the dl-dvi connection. I'll test it out after I go to the grocery store.

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