| disolitude said: @Ssenkahdavic Check this out. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1247677 Second post - "1080p60 Frame Packing video (full resolution 1080p60 per eye 3D video) requires 297 MHz of bandwidth (based on the bandwidth chart in the HDMI 1.4a 3D specification). The fastest HDMI chips I have seen are capable of 225 MHz so as far as I know there aren't any HDMI chips announced yet that would support it." All I can say is that I love my DLP...8 MICRO second refresh rate (best LEDs have 2 miliseconds which is 2000 micro seconds) and 300 hz screen processing. All these newer technologies are still playing catchup to the bluky old DLPs :) |
Ill convert my numbers to cycles/s (from bites/second). Those would be minimum required MHz numbers. HDMI 1.3 is supposed to support 10.2 gigabites/s or 340 MHz to meet spec (HDMI 1.2 is 4.95gigabites/s or 165 MHz).
EDIT: Found the answer to this. they must be able to TRANSMIT at 340 MHz to meet spec, says NOTHING about receiving at the same rate (makes sense too, say the PS3 can transmit the right bandwidth but why have the TV receive that bandwidth if it does not have too?)
He needs to add to that the color depth (pixel count is not all of the bandwidth requirements). Oh well everyone forgets this part of it :(
You and me both on the DLP side. Mitsu has said before they plan on continuing DLP support for a good while. Whether this means they will continue to manufacture their current models (with little changes here and there) or keep upgrading the current tech, who knows, but I am still a major supporter of DLP tech.









