HQV Benchmarks

The HQV Benchmark DVD is made by Silicon Optix and has become a standard for testing the quality of DVD decoders. The tests were made to showcase the capabilities of very high end DVD hardware, and it just happens to make a very objective series of benchmarks for testing more moderately priced DVD players. The DVD contains numerous video clips to test how well the decoder handles some common problem-areas for some of the lower quality players. The videos test things like picture detail and noise reduction, and points are scored for each test according to how well the video processor does.

ATI recently came out with some new drivers which were meant to improve the score on these tests, and today we are testing them against the latest version of NVIDIA's PureVideo decoding. It should be noted that while ATI's DVD decoder is free with an AIW card, the PureVideo decoder adds additional cost to NVIDIA products.

Many of the functions tested in HQV aren't limited in application to DVD decoding. Things like deinterlacing need to happen on the AIW when tuning TV signals as well. This way we can also get an idea of the quality of video the AIW will be capable of in general.

Color Bar/Vertical Detail

The first test on the HQV DVD is the Color Bar/Vertical Detail test. This basically tests how well the video processor tells if something is moving or not, to ensure proper deinterlacing. We found that ATI did slightly better than NVIDIA in this test, as there was some minor flickering that was evident on NVIDIA's side. ATI scored perfectly here.

  • ATI: 10
  • NVIDIA: 5
  • (highest score: 10)




The Card and The Features HQV Jaggies Tests
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  • ayersmj - Saturday, February 11, 2006 - link

    I am looking to build a Media Center PC. I need a card that has a YPbPr input and can be paired with a SB audigy to record the signal coming off my Directv HD Reciever. Tivo doesnt have a PVR yet that can work with this and I was kind of hoping to build one myself. Would this card allow me to do this? If not, what do I need. The MIT MyHD cards will not work as they do not have either a DVI input or a YPbPr input.

    Thanks.
  • PeteRoy - Friday, February 10, 2006 - link

    Hey put the old way of showing benchmark figures, this is too confusing and hard to read!
  • Pastuch - Friday, February 10, 2006 - link

    "If performance continues to increase at the rate that it has been, we aren't sure how game software will be able to keep up. We are always happy when we see advancements in technology, but the huge sizes of some of these high end cards make us think better efficiency might be good direction for graphics hardware to move toward."

    I'm so tired of reading comments like these! Look at the benches of Fear and try to tell me that graphics power is in abundance. You have to buy a $600 graphics card to play the game at a decent framerate on pretty much any LCD monitor sold today. Even if you buy a low end 17 inch LCD you are going to be running 1280x1024 because that is your monitors native resolution and anything less results in a much poorer picture.

    With the number of features built into most motherboards I cant see any problem with filling the extra space with graphics cards. You dont need 5 PCI slots. The charm of the ATX standard is and always has been adaptability.

    P.S. The price of graphics cards is totally rediculous these days. The cheapest 7800gtx 512mb you can buy in Canada is $899 on sale! The x1900xtx can be found for around $680. I hope Nvidia doesnt continue this crazy pricing in their spring release.
  • flashbacck - Friday, February 10, 2006 - link

    Where does one get the ATI DVD decoder? Does that only come with the AIW cards?
  • LoneWolf15 - Friday, February 10, 2006 - link

    It's taking ATI an awfully long time to figure out how to put the Theater 550 on All-In-Wonder cards in place of the Theater 200. Until they can do it, and thus give us hardware MPEG-2 encoding when recording video, I'd rather pay to have both a video card, and a separate tuner card (like my Hauppauge WinTV PVR 150) in my system. The All-In-Wonder X1900 is supposed to be the Cadillac; why are the video recording features more akin to a Chevy?
  • Questar - Friday, February 10, 2006 - link

    Is this your attempt at a troll, or are you just uninformed?
    This card has MPEG 1/2/4 hardware encoding. ATI has had hardware encoding on the AIW card for over a year.

    http://www.ati.com/products/radeonx1900/aiwx1900/f...">http://www.ati.com/products/radeonx1900/aiwx1900/f...

  • LoneWolf15 - Monday, February 13, 2006 - link

    Gee, thanks for your insulting reply. It is possible to be informative without being insulting, you know.

    LoneWolf (the "troll" who owns a Radeon X800XL and an ATI TV Wonder PCI)
  • Questar - Monday, February 13, 2006 - link

    How can you own an X800XL and not know it does hardware mpeg encoding?
  • Questar - Monday, February 13, 2006 - link

    Oh, I get it, you didn't get the AIW version.

    Hmmmmmm....
  • ianken - Monday, February 13, 2006 - link

    None of the ATI cards do HW based MPEG2 (or any other sort) of encoding. At least not yet. ATI has demoed their AVC codec, of which the released version of the demo does not actually use the hardware and produce horrendous quality becuasr they skip most of the AVC codec features to attain high speeds.

    To see this all you need to do is compare CPU load of teh AIW -vs- the ATI 550 Elite and see that the AIW is not using hardware of any kind.

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