De-Interlacing Quality - 3:2 Detection
"Although video programs are transmitted to your TV using one of two picture refresh rates - 30 frames per second, interlaced (30i) and 60 frames per second, progressive scan (60p) - the original program content may have vastly different refresh rates. For example, motion picture film is shot, edited, and screened with a picture refresh rate of 24 frames per second, progressive scan (24p).

To convert such programs for television, a conversion process is used to find a common mathematical relationship between the original program and the broadcast format in use. One common technique is called 3:2 pulldown. During this technique, one additional film frame is repeated in every fifth field of video - hence, the term "3:2". A complete film-to-video sequence actually has a 2:3:2:3 pattern.

A quality video processing circuit will detect the extra frame and remove it to result in a smooth presentation of motion. However, the 3:2 sequences can be corrupted during digital editing, insertion of video effects and titles, digital compositing, and intercutting with animated sequences (which often have very different cadences).

Electronic editing is the most common source of discontinuities in the 3:2 sequence. If all edits started on the first, odd-numbered field of video (often called the 'A' frame), then the job of the 3:2 circuitry in your TV would be quite simple. However, when edits do not start on the 'A' frame, your 3:2 processor can lose count and must recapture the sequence.

For this test, your TV's progressive scan image or 3:2 cadence processor must be set in "Automatic" mode, not "Film Mode". As you watch the test image, pay attention to detail in the rows of seats in the racetrack grandstand. In addition to smooth motion and image detail, observe how quickly the TV's image processor picks up the 3:2 pattern.

No more than 5 frames (about .2 seconds) should pass before this happens, which is about the time it takes the racecar to reach the "HOMESTEAD" billboard on the wall along the track. If you see a strong moiré interference pattern in the grandstand, it is evidence that the processor has not correctly detected the image cadence."
Both ATI and NVIDIA detected the 3:2 sequence and properly de-interlaced the scene within the 0.2 second/5 frame suggested limit by the benchmark, but what was truly interesting was the fact that NVIDIA's solution didn't have any visible moiré pattern at all, even for 5 frames.

For the ATI solution, there was a short period of time where the following was visible:

But before the homestead billboard, ATI's de-interlacing kicked in and we saw this:

We never saw a screenshot similar to the first one with NVIDIA; we only saw what you see below:

But since both ATI and NVIDIA qualified for a score of 10 by the benchmark's standards, they both get the same score here, despite the descrepancy noted.

Scoring Description
10 OVERALL SHARPNESS IS GOOD, NO MOIRÉ PATTERN IS SEEN, AND THE TV LOCKS INTO FILM MODE ALMOST INSTANTLY (NO MORE THAN 5 FRAMES OR ABOUT .2 SECONDS)
5 THE IMAGE LOOKS DETAILED AND MOTION IS SMOOTH, BUT MOIRÉ IS SEEN IN THE GRANDSTAND FOR UP TO ONE HALF SECOND (ABOUT 15 FRAMES) AS THE TV SWITCHES INTO FILM MODE
0 THE TV TAKES TOO LONG TO LOCK INTO FILM MODE OR DROPS IN AND OUT OF FILM MODE, AND A STRONG MOIRÉ PATTERN IS SEEN IN THE GRANDSTAND


De-Interlacing Quality: Waving Flag De-Interlacing Quality - Film Cadence
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  • intellon - Thursday, October 6, 2005 - link

    One thing about the guitar strings... Are you sure that they are artifacts and not the texture of the guitar strings? I do agree with one thing, they kinda look extreme...
  • TheSnowman - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    It is an acoustic base guitar and those do tend to use some pretty massive copper wound strings, but yeah I don't see anything that looks like interlacing artifacts in those shots.

    Regardless, thanks for the update Anand and I'll check back to see how things turn out. The next card I buy will most likely be for my media center so de-interlacing quality is on my priority list.

  • TheSnowman - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    I don't follow, the text at the bottom which the test askes to be compared defiantly doesn't show any interlacing artifacts in the posted pics while compression artifacts are mostly in the top right of the image and on the hands. The text does look a bit sharper on Nvidia, but best I can tell that is just from appling a sharpening fliter as that seems to be pretty obviously the case in the last shot with the fingers on piano keys and the slight shifts in geometry than can be seen there.

    Also, since the compression artifacts only appear in the first ATI shot, I can't help but wonder if that came about from downsampling as the jpg to under 40mb which nearly a quarter of what a full quality jpg of that resolution would be. Regardless, I am curious to see any further explnation of de-interlacing issues with the new r5xx chips as I would hate to try and upgrade my media center card only to wind up with worse de-interlacing than on my current r420 based card.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    The text itself is fine, it is the background image where the interlacing artifacts are seen. I'll see if I can get a better screen grab tonight.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, October 6, 2005 - link

    Apparently ATI isn't seeing what I'm seeing, so the issues may have been a driver problem, I will update you guys as soon as I have a driver/fix for the situation.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • vailr - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Newer driver version?
    Ati Catalyst 8.18 beta:
    http://www.station-drivers.com/forum/viewtopic.php...">http://www.station-drivers.com/forum/viewtopic.php...
  • Live - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    quote:

    For now, be sure to read our technology and gaming performance coverage on ATI's Radeon X1000 line.


    I would if I could. Quit teasing us and give as the real deal, lol.
  • cirrhosis - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    INQ has benchies already. Not a surprise. Cards are matched.
  • Hacp - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    GRAKK!
  • cirrhosis - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Interesting. Here's hoping that ATI improves on what they've started. Looking forward to the comoing months and what they bring.

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