Sparrowhawk
Member
Interesting. That's not really what I meant, but it could indicate that a different signal type is reaching your TV (and being processed differently, etc).
If you're looking for differences in image clarity, you're not going to find much by looking at static images. Interlaced signals are usually put through a slight blurry "flicker filter"; this is to cut down on high-frequency details that could cause flicker if the signal is displayed back on a natively interlaced display. Aside from this difference in filtering, for scenes that aren't in motion, an interlaced image and a progressive image should look identical. If you aren't moving around and doing things, you might be able to spot that the interlaced image is a bit softer (depending on what you're sensitive to), but they won't likely look much different.
You're going to want to compare cases with significant on-screen movement.
The best test would be if you could find a spot where a character is locked into a glitchy twitchy movement where they jump back and forth between two locations/orientations between frames; interlaced signals have a horrible time with that sort of thing, even in 60fps games, and your TV would likely look very different in a progressive case versus an interlaced case.
Seriously though, see if your TV can just tell you what kind of signal it's receiving. Sometimes the remote will have some sort of "info" button or something that will bring up the signal characteristics for the current input.
You were right about my remote, haha. I changed the settings and it's displaying properly. 480i when I disable 480p, and 480p when enabled, both in 4:3.
I read the following on an A/V forum...
"Another reason you might be seeing a difference here is problems with the basic white/black level settings on your TV given what's coming from the player. Some players do funny things at 480i and not at 480p and some are screwy the other way around. Typically this shows up as a change of black levels (the image gets lighter or darker when you switch from 480i to 480p unless you remember to make compensating adjustments on your TV) or as a loss of the mysterious "Blacker than Black" data in the signal.."
I have no clue. It's not really that important to me. Also, the start screen for JSRF has a lot of action going on and I've pretty much pressed my face up to my TV looking for significant differences but don't see any. My eyes might not be as trained as a lot of videophiles, however.