2015-10-22, 08:20
(2015-10-21, 16:20)XTrojan Wrote: Does MadVR do 10bit 4:4:4 on 4k? I Bought a new TV but some professionells are saying that 4:4:4 10bit 4k is impossible since HDMI 2.0 can't handle it.
I'm unsure if my new TV does 4:4:4 on 24Hz as well, they only stated that it does 8bit 4:4:4 at 50/60Hz with PC mode on and UHD color on.
Should i thus decrease native bitdepth to -> 8bit, and disable DX11 10bit?
The Blurays i have are encoded in 4:2:0 and probably 8bit color, if i understood correctly, MadVR will upscale it to 4:4:4 RGB & 10bit?
4:4:4 is a description of chroma subsampling using the Y'CbCr color space. madVR will output as RGB, which is 4:4:4 (or equivalent). Some TVs will want to convert the RGB output back to Y'CbCr. This could mean down-converting to 4:2:2 or 4:4:4. This would remain true regardless of the bit depth (8 or 10-bit).
In either case, this should not make much of a difference. There is a 4:4:4 test image in the Image Scaling section of the set-up guide if you are curious what your TV does to the signal. But 10-bit RGB is, of course, possible with any TV.
(2015-10-21, 19:12)Talguy Wrote:(2015-10-21, 16:20)XTrojan Wrote: Does MadVR do 10bit 4:4:4 on 4k? I Bought a new TV but some professionells are saying that 4:4:4 10bit 4k is impossible since HDMI 2.0 can't handle it.
I'm unsure if my new TV does 4:4:4 on 24Hz as well, they only stated that it does 8bit 4:4:4 at 50/60Hz with PC mode on and UHD color on.
Should i thus decrease native bitdepth to -> 8bit, and disable DX11 10bit?
The Blurays i have are encoded in 4:2:0 and probably 8bit color, if i understood correctly, MadVR will upscale it to 4:4:4 RGB & 10bit?
Doesn't
4:2:0 = 8 Bits
4:2:2 = 10 Bits
4:4:4 = 12 Bits?
RGB is measured in bits per channel: 8-bits per channel or 10-bits per channel.
So, RGB 4:4:4 at 10 bits would be equal to 30 bits. RGB 4:2:2 would be 20 bits.