Re: LCD tV aldi
Die RMR is het addertje, is een eigen manier om de klant om de tuin te leiden.
Kijk hieronder naar het vb van Samsung, zij noemen het CMR (ik denk dat de Aldi tv dus Refresh Motion Rate wil zeggen en U wijsmaakt wat U wil horen, nl U de illusie geeft een beeldverversing van 200Hz te doen, je mag er donder op zeggen dat dit niet klopt ;-) )
Samsung CMR
Though Samsung is fantastic at creative marketing ("LED" TV was its thing), it at least doesn't outright call the TVs with the aforementioned tricks "480Hz" refresh. Instead, it has "CMR" or Clear Motion Rate. "Samsung's more comprehensive Clear Motion Rate takes into account all three factors that contribute to motion clarity: panel refresh rate, image processor speed, and backlight technology." In other words, a TV with a CMR of 240 could be a 120Hz panel, with an average processor, and a scanning backlight, or a 60Hz panel, a fancy processor, and a scanning backlight. It's unlikely a TV with a CMR of 240 would be a 240Hz panel, as such an expensive panel would almost certainly come with one or both the other features. Here's an illustration showing how it gets the numbers.
Bron : http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/fake-ref...-really-120hz/
Die RMR is het addertje, is een eigen manier om de klant om de tuin te leiden.
Kijk hieronder naar het vb van Samsung, zij noemen het CMR (ik denk dat de Aldi tv dus Refresh Motion Rate wil zeggen en U wijsmaakt wat U wil horen, nl U de illusie geeft een beeldverversing van 200Hz te doen, je mag er donder op zeggen dat dit niet klopt ;-) )
Samsung CMR
Though Samsung is fantastic at creative marketing ("LED" TV was its thing), it at least doesn't outright call the TVs with the aforementioned tricks "480Hz" refresh. Instead, it has "CMR" or Clear Motion Rate. "Samsung's more comprehensive Clear Motion Rate takes into account all three factors that contribute to motion clarity: panel refresh rate, image processor speed, and backlight technology." In other words, a TV with a CMR of 240 could be a 120Hz panel, with an average processor, and a scanning backlight, or a 60Hz panel, a fancy processor, and a scanning backlight. It's unlikely a TV with a CMR of 240 would be a 240Hz panel, as such an expensive panel would almost certainly come with one or both the other features. Here's an illustration showing how it gets the numbers.
Bron : http://www.cnet.com/uk/news/fake-ref...-really-120hz/
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