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Will 60fps cause less response time in 144hz monitor?

220VoltsallCore
27 minutes ago, 220VoltsallCore said:

 

 

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the 1ms is fake, marketing purpose only

 

tldw 5ms at 165hz and 7ms at 60hz, the 5ms from ur old monitor is also likely for marketing purposes only.

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Pixel response time tells you how quickly a pixel can switch from one color to another color. This is independent from the monitor's refresh rate and has nothing to do with how many frames per second your computer can render. It's also not the same as input lag.

 

It is also a largely made up number. The manufacturer will measure this under ideal conditions, so check reviews, rather than trusting their claims.

 

If your PC is only capable of running 60 fps, you don't really benefit from 144 Hz. Ideally, get a monitor capable of VRR, so whatever FPS your computer is able to achieve, the monitor will adjust its Hz to match.

Remember to either quote or @mention others, so they are notified of your reply

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9 hours ago, Eigenvektor said:

Pixel response time tells you how quickly a pixel can switch from one color to another color. This is independent from the monitor's refresh rate and has nothing to do with how many frames per second your computer can render. It's also not the same as input lag.

 

It is also a largely made up number. The manufacturer will measure this under ideal conditions, so check reviews, rather than trusting their claims.

 

If your PC is only capable of running 60 fps, you don't really benefit from 144 Hz. Ideally, get a monitor capable of VRR, so whatever FPS your computer is able to achieve, the monitor will adjust its Hz to match.

its lg uk650 with gsync

so low response time gives more motion clarity?

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50 minutes ago, 220VoltsallCore said:

its lg uk650 with gsync

so low response time gives more motion clarity?

Technically low persistence, how long it takes the subpixels to change between shades of grey.  This is why OLED is so good for this as its the light itself that turns on and off instantly, not a liquid that has to physically move to block/uncover the light source behind.

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