VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. how do you find files with good fps, or is there a way to make a file get a better fps than it already has?
    Quote Quote  
  2. what?
    "Today is only yesterdays tomorrow"
    Quote Quote  
  3. frames per second, some movies don't always come with good fps, I just wanted to know how to find movies with better fps, and if you could make fps better than it is, using some type of program or something?
    Quote Quote  
  4. FPS has nothing to do with the quality.

    23fps is a film
    25fps is PAL (UK and parts of Europe etc)
    29fps is North America
    "Today is only yesterdays tomorrow"
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Texas USA
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by wee haggis
    FPS has nothing to do with the quality.
    23fps is a film
    25fps is PAL (UK and parts of Europe etc)
    29fps is North America
    Yes it does. Those specs you gave are ideal fps. Sort of.

    24fps is film
    23.976 is NTSCfilm
    29.97 is NTSC
    25 is PAL
    25 is SECAM

    But some downloads (and legal ones too) comes as low as 10fps. That affects quality. Why? Because it is slower than the human eye, and therefore we observe the problem of jerkiness. Anything above 20 is pretty much ignored, given that it is smooth and not a bad conversion. Anything below tends to look like crap.
    I'm not online anymore. Ask BALDRICK, LORDSMURF or SATSTORM for help. PM's are ignored.
    Quote Quote  
  6. And, no you cant put back the frames that are not there. You could reencode it at a higher framerate, but this would not improve the playback as the original frames are still missing.
    Quote Quote  
  7. Originally Posted by txpharoah
    Originally Posted by wee haggis
    FPS has nothing to do with the quality.
    23fps is a film
    25fps is PAL (UK and parts of Europe etc)
    29fps is North America
    Yes it does. Those specs you gave are ideal fps. Sort of.

    24fps is film
    23.976 is NTSCfilm
    29.97 is NTSC
    25 is PAL
    25 is SECAM

    But some downloads (and legal ones too) comes as low as 10fps. That affects quality. Why? Because it is slower than the human eye, and therefore we observe the problem of jerkiness. Anything above 20 is pretty much ignored, given that it is smooth and not a bad conversion. Anything below tends to look like crap.
    I just rounded off the numbers to get my point across.
    Sure if you went as low as 10fps you would see a maked difference in qualilty,but to most of our eyes the difference between the 3 common ones is not easily spotted.
    My point was that I think he's mixing up his understanding of fps as opposed to kbits/sec.
    "Today is only yesterdays tomorrow"
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!