An OLED panel does not have a variable overdrive. Why should you? As you will soon see, an OLED panel does not need such a thing. The response time of the pixels does not have to be adjusted to the FPS/Hz of the screen to avoid overshoot.
Variable Overdrive @ 120 Hz
Variable Overdrive @ 100 Hz
Variable Overdrive @ 80 Hz
Variable Overdrive @ 60 Hz
Basically no perceptible overshoot at all and consistent pixel response time: Any questions? Means no ghosting and also no inverse ghosting. This is then called: Single-Overdrive-experience! Yes, it sounds paradoxical now, because the monitor has no overdrive, but that’s how it’s called. Set it and forget it. Unfortunately, LG’s OLED feature BFI: Black Frame Insertion (also called backlight strobing) is missing here. This feature is just mega cool, especially on my LG OLED C1. Especially at 60 Hz, the motion clarity is pushed enormously. The KTC G42P5 does not even have this feature in its portfolio. I don’t need to understand that now.
- 1 - Introduction, Features and Specs
- 2 - Workmanship and Details
- 3 - How we measure: Equipment and Methods
- 4 - Pixel Response Times
- 5 - Variable Overdrive
- 6 - Display Latencies
- 7 - Color-Performance @ Default Settings
- 8 - Direct Comparison
- 9 - Color-Performance calibrated
- 10 - HDR, Summary and Conclusion
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