Xbox One 50Hz TV signal judder explained


Recommended Posts

This is my reasoning why I think my TV is OK, the signal comes out of my cable box at 50hz it then goes into the HDMI in on the X1 and from what I understand it must be getting converted to 60hz and then sent to the TV via the HDMI out. Now this is the same HDMI out that is used to play games on, so that would be 60hz to and I don't have an issue with any freezing or stuttering with that.

So surely that must rule out the TV?

Let's stay on topic guys. MS isn't the only US based company that targets the US first and leaves most of the rest of the world out with it's services. I don't get Netflix, I don't get Hulu, I don't get lots of web services. Hell my country just got Spotify last month ffs. All we can do is wait for them to expand to our market. Let's not single out one company like they're the only ones doing it, lots are.

Bit different, those are either much smaller companies or are us specific cable providers. Microsoft are already of the size with regional divisions to accomodate worldwide products, however they do poorly in pretty much every regard.

Its no surprise people are complaining. This is a pretty major oversight.

Im not surprised though. Microsofts live services have been totally US focussed for years and the reveal of the Xbox one just reinforced that.

Let's stay on topic guys.   MS isn't the only US based company that targets the US first and leaves most of the rest of the world out with it's services.  I don't get Netflix, I don't get Hulu,  I don't get lots of web services.  Hell my country just got Spotify last month ffs.   All we can do is wait for them to expand to our market.    Let's not single out one company like they're the only ones doing it, lots are. 

 

The difference is that Netflix and Hulu don't pretend to offer their services or don't offer partially supported services in Greece.  MS, on the other hand, are selling the Xbox One in the EU and other regions that only support 50Hz and they're selling it at full price despite the fact that it doesn't work properly.  Unfortunately Microsoft have proven time and time again that they're unable to manage TV outside the US and if WMC is anything to go by the Xbox is never going to work properly. 

Bit different, those are either much smaller companies or are us specific cable providers. Microsoft are already of the size with regional divisions to accomodate worldwide products, however they do poorly in pretty much every regard.

Its no surprise people are complaining. This is a pretty major oversight.

Im not surprised though. Microsofts live services have been totally US focussed for years and the reveal of the Xbox one just reinforced that.

Netflix is not a small company though.

Also, lets not forget Google and Apple. Large companies too and they both have problems offering all media services to all regions.

The reality is that its is quite difficult to offer a single device that conforms to each and every tv standard while also fully supporting the cable boxes that are used in different regions. MS stated as much before launch, and yet some people would ignore that, as if MS made this pledge of 100% support in all regions day one. They pledged to roll out European TV support post launch, basically as soon as they could. Right now, the only pledged support has been for the US since they had time to complete building in support.

Regardless, I hope anyone effected by this is actually reaching out to MS directly to make sure they know the extent of the issue. It would be interesting to hear what responses you guys get. As I told SnoopZ, give MS a call, get on a live chat, and post on their official twitter support page. That will get their attention and hopefully result in a positive response for those affected.

The difference is that Netflix and Hulu don't pretend to offer their services or don't offer partially supported services in Greece.  MS, on the other hand, are selling the Xbox One in the EU and other regions that only support 50Hz and they're selling it at full price despite the fact that it doesn't work properly.  Unfortunately Microsoft have proven time and time again that they're unable to manage TV outside the US and if WMC is anything to go by the Xbox is never going to work properly.

And again, MS made no secret about the fact that proper UK/European TV support would be coming later, post launch.

  • Like 2

Did you get a chance to check if the X1 is properly showing the make and model of your tv, receiver, and cable box in its settings?

I will have to check that tomorrow, not sure where to look, how would it know what cable box I have as I never had to tell it?

So from reading some more comments on the issue elsewhere, its strange that all of those comments are about the 'judder' affect that SnoopZ brought up. No one has mentioned the constant freezing issue.

Could it be that the judder issue can be overcome by simply disabling the 'film' detection feature on whatever model hdtv you happen to own?

That doesn't solve the freezing issue talked about here, but it takes care of one issue.

It sounds like this can be overcome with a software patch. The X1 is already capable of switching refresh rates on the fly for certain apps. The bluray player can be set to run at 24hz. When this is on, bluray playback is 24hz at full screen and the display output switches to 60hz when using the snap function or switching to another app.

So all MS will need to do is allow 50hz as an option to enable for the TV playback app. So while TV is at full screen, its pushing 50hz and if you snap something or switch out, it changes to 60hz.

This is my reasoning why I think my TV is OK, the signal comes out of my cable box at 50hz it then goes into the HDMI in on the X1 and from what I understand it must be getting converted to 60hz and then sent to the TV via the HDMI out. Now this is the same HDMI out that is used to play games on, so that would be 60hz to and I don't have an issue with any freezing or stuttering with that.

So surely that must rule out the TV?

 

It's not your TV, it's the 50Hz video output from the channel / TV box you are viewing. You could reproduce the same result with any HDMI display that supports Picture In Picture, one source 60Hz and the other 50Hz.

Different TV modes will try to compensate for it and will likely make it worse or even cause the processing program to fail.

 

I used to have the same type of problem using PiP or Side by Side with a PS2 (50Hz), PC (60Hz) and Dell UltraSharp 20" display (60Hz). I currently have the same issue if I view my Yamaha's setup menu during HDMI pass through on-screen as I have a 50Hz menu overlay over a 60Hz HDMI signal (One hell of a headache).

 

If Microsoft can fix that via a software update & keep the same feature set, I will be quite impressed.

just to make it clear, the problem is not the tv. Its the fact that his cable box outputs 50hz, and Xbox one outputs 60hz. Any modern tv should support 50hz and 60hz. But since the Xbox is taking a 50hz and outputting 60hz, some type of frame rate conversion is either happening,which leads to judder, or my theory is that no framerate conversion is actually happening yet,so the 50hz signal is being dumped straight to the set,which leads to a repeat of the last frame at 10x,which is why the picture looks like it froze. Microsoft has said support for tv services is coming to different regions down the road,I don't think its fair to criticize this feature if it is broken for those users.

 

anyways with bluray there is a 24hz mode that will let your tv handle this signal natively,and if your tv can do 24hz you will get a judder free picture with no 3:2 pulldown required. If you turn the option off,Xbox will do the pulldown and output it at 60hz. It may be that for EU users could be able to choose for the Xbox do frame rate conversion of 50hz to 60hz(may be noticeable judder) when used in snap view,and when full screen it will set the tv mode to 50hz(tv may blank for a second when switching modes), just like it does if you set the bluray 24hz option on. Another option they may give is to run the UI and tv at 50hz, and when switching to a game tv will switch over to 60hz.

  • Like 2

And again, MS made no secret about the fact that proper UK/European TV support would be coming later, post launch.

 

Well, they were up front about the fact that they wouldn't offer guide support at launch but they should have disabled HDMI pass through altogether if they couldn't get it to work.  They should probably have discounted the Xbox at launch if they couldn't get it to do everything it is meant to do. Why is the rest of the world paying for missing functionality?

 

As for proper UK/European TV support - I don't think we'll ever get that.  For instance, here in the UK many/most people watch free to air TV using the tuner in their TV rather than a set top box.  AFAIK the Xbox will never support that.  I also doubt that MS will offer full support for all the different cable operators here in Europe at any point (although I'd be happy to be proven wrong).

So, when playing a blu-ray... are we going to see a 3:2 pull-down issue and extra judder too? :/

There is an option in the settings to enable 24hz while playing blurays in full screen.

 

 

I will have to check that tomorrow, not sure where to look.

Alright. I'm not sure if this will help at all, but I think it would be helpful to verify that things are being seen properly.

for reference, choose the 'Settings' tile and then:

1. Choose 'TV & One Guide'

2. Choose 'Devices'

3. Here you should see your devices listed with the right model numbers. If they are not correct, then try to set them up and choose the correct models

Also, after you have checked that, back out of 'Devices' and choose 'Troubleshooting'. In here, you should see the first option is 'HDMI'. Your device should be listed. If it is, then choose it and it will troubleshoot your display, perhaps offering some fix.

Well, they were up front about the fact that they wouldn't offer guide support at launch but they should have disabled HDMI pass through altogether if they couldn't get it to work.  They should probably have discounted the Xbox at launch if they couldn't get it to do everything it is meant to do. Why is the rest of the world paying for missing functionality?

 

As for proper UK/European TV support - I don't think we'll ever get that.  For instance, here in the UK many/most people watch free to air TV using the tuner in their TV rather than a set top box.  AFAIK the Xbox will never support that.  I also doubt that MS will offer full support for all the different cable operators here in Europe at any point (although I'd be happy to be proven wrong).

Look, both console launched with missing features. For MS in particular, they have said plainly that they intend to bring full support post launch. I'm not sure how much more plain they could have been on that.

MS even went as far as to specifically say that OTA was also going to be a supported option for TV viewing. I'm not claiming this will happen or that its possible, I'm just sharing what MS has said. Its on their site for all to see.

I have no idea if the current issue is part of that delayed support roll out, or if its a bug that was not meant to present at launch. All I know is that MS claims to be working on rolling out the tv features as quickly as they can. This issue needs to be told directly to MS by those affected.

the zune was a product that no one wanted or needed though parts of it's legacy lives in windows phone. You europeans will still trip over yourselves to get the Xbox One. You've delt with the 50hz problem on games going back to at least the 80s and you're still dealing with it now. Maybe it would do you good to get a 60hz  tv as your gaming TV.

 

no the 50hz "problem" has nothing to do with the games and this doesn't affect gaming. games will work in 60hz on our TV's. seriously READ THE THREAD! 

I call this an out cry and considering everyone i know in the UK with an X1 has the same issue.

 

http://www.hdtvtest.co.uk/news/xbox-50hz-201311233468.htm

 

When it freezes does only the TV picture freeze or does everything from the xbox freeze ? can you open the xbox menu ? if you have something snapped with the tv picture does it freeze to or just the tv picture ? 

This is my reasoning why I think my TV is OK, the signal comes out of my cable box at 50hz it then goes into the HDMI in on the X1 and from what I understand it must be getting converted to 60hz and then sent to the TV via the HDMI out. Now this is the same HDMI out that is used to play games on, so that would be 60hz to and I don't have an issue with any freezing or stuttering with that.

So surely that must rule out the TV?

 

Actually the HDMI cable I suspected of being bad was the one between your tuner and the xbox, not xbox and tv. 

Look, both console launched with missing features. For MS in particular, they have said plainly that they intend to bring full support post launch. I'm not sure how much more plain they could have been on that.

MS even went as far as to specifically say that OTA was also going to be a supported option for TV viewing. I'm not claiming this will happen or that its possible, I'm just sharing what MS has said. Its on their site for all to see.

I have no idea if the current issue is part of that delayed support roll out, or if its a bug that was not meant to present at launch. All I know is that MS claims to be working on rolling out the tv features as quickly as they can. This issue needs to be told directly to MS by those affected.

 

The problem is that most people are not going to any site to read if a feature most people don't understand works or not. If you are going to rush out a console then maybe it would have been better to remove that feature for those countries affected so you then don't get the negative press for a half assed implementation.

The problem is that most people are not going to any site to read if a feature most people don't understand works or not. If you are going to rush out a console then maybe it would have been better to remove that feature for those countries affected so you then don't get the negative press for a half assed implementation.

Wouldn't those same people be upset to find out that the hdmi-in port on their X1 was disabled all together? As you said, they wouldn't go and read MS' announcement anyway. Lets remember, the issue is only tied to live TV, there is nothing stopping people in Europe from using the function with other devices. So it still has some utility even while this bug is present.

But again, I have no idea if the lack of 50hz support is a bug or if its part of the delayed support that MS spoke about.

If it is a bug, then MS may be working on a fix. Either way, I hope people are not just talking on forums but are actually contacting MS. I want to hear what their response is once so many users contact them. It should light a fire under them.

Did you get a chance to check if the X1 is properly showing the make and model of your tv, receiver, and cable box in its settings?

The TV is set correctly, and this morning it is freezing all the time making it unwatchable through the X1.

When it freezes does only the TV picture freeze or does everything from the xbox freeze ? can you open the xbox menu ? if you have something snapped with the tv picture does it freeze to or just the tv picture ? 

The X1 doesn't freeze at all i can still move around the guide.

Wouldn't those same people be upset to find out that the hdmi-in port on their X1 was disabled all together? As you said, they wouldn't go and read MS' announcement anyway. Lets remember, the issue is only tied to live TV, there is nothing stopping people in Europe from using the function with other devices. So it still has some utility even while this bug is present.

But again, I have no idea if the lack of 50hz support is a bug or if its part of the delayed support that MS spoke about.

If it is a bug, then MS may be working on a fix. Either way, I hope people are not just talking on forums but are actually contacting MS. I want to hear what their response is once so many users contact them. It should light a fire under them.

 

It's not easy, actually verging on downright impossible to patch this. All the games/UI would have to be reprogrammed to 50hz.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • AIMP 5.40 Build 2721 by Razvan Serea AIMP is a powerful audio player that allows you to listen to your favorite music with an outstanding sound quality. Its appearance resembles that of another classical audio player (Winamp). The program includes a 20-band equalizer, a visualization window to display rhythmic visual effects and a playlist editor to organize your audio files. A nice fading effect makes your list of songs look like an endless music loop and a handy volume normalizing feature avoids drastic volume changes between tracks. Also, the players main functions can be conveniently controlled by global hotkeys. Besides playing music, AIMP features three extra utilities which also enable you to record any sound on your computer, convert audio files from one format to another and view or edit tags. AIMP is based on the well-known audio engine BASS, so its easy to connect new plug-ins (from the plug-in library included in the program) and expand the players functionality. Main Features and Functions: Multi-Format Playback: Supports numerous audio formats, including CDA, AAC, AC3, APE, DTS, FLAC, IT, MIDI, MO3, MOD, M4A, M4B, MP1, MP2, MP3, MPC, MTM, OFR, OGG, OPUS, RMI, S3M, SPX, TAK, TTA, UMX, WAV, WMA, WV, XM, DSF, DFF, MKA, AA3, AT3, OMA, WebM, MDZ, ITZ, S3Z, XMZ, AIFF, and MPEG-DASH (YouTube). CUE Sheet Support: Enables the use of CUE sheets for managing audio tracks. Output Support: Compatible with DirectSound, ASIO, WASAPI, and WASAPI Exclusive output methods. 32-Bit Audio Processing: Utilizes 32-bit audio processing for optimal sound quality. Internet Radio: Allows listening to internet radio stations in OGG, WAV, MP3, AAC, and AAC+ formats, with the capability to capture streams in various formats. Bookmarks and Playback Queue: Facilitates creating bookmarks and managing a playback queue. Rating and Auto-Marks: Collects statistics on track listening and automatically calculates ratings and marks for listened tracks. Plugin Support: Allows the addition of new utilities or extensions to existing features through plugins. Built-in Scrobbler: Supports Last.fm, Libre.fm, and ListenBrainz services for scrobbling. Cloud Integration: Supports OneDrive, Google Drive, DropBox, Облако@mail.ru, Яндекс.Диск, and custom WebDAV clouds. Podcasts: Offers podcast support for subscribing and listening. Hotkeys: Allows configuration of local and global hotkeys. Multi-User Mode Support: Supports multiple users working on one computer. Multi-Language Interface: Provides a multi-language interface. 4K and High DPI Support: Supports scale factors of 125%, 150%, 175%, and 200% for high-resolution displays. Flexible Program Options: Offers customizable program settings. Flexible UI: Charm UI: A modern flat-style skin with 4K and High DPI support. Bliss 4K: A skin-transformer from AIMP4 included in the installation package. Pandemic: The classic skin from AIMP3 included in the installation package. User Skins: Access to a catalog of user-created skins. Sound Effects: 20-Band Equalizer and Built-in Sound Effects: Includes Reverb, Flanger, Chorus, Pitch, Tempo, Echo, Speed, Bass, Enhancer, and Voice Remover effects with flexible settings. Volume Normalization: Features peak-based normalization and Replay Gain, along with logarithmic and loudness-compensated volume control. Mixing Options: Offers Fade In/Fade Out, cross-mixing, and pause between tracks. Silence Remover: Removes silence from tracks for a seamless listening experience. Music Library: Music Library: Organizes music files, allows setting marks for listened tracks, and keeps playback statistics. Smart Playlist: Creates playlists based on content from the Music Library database, with filtering and grouping capabilities. Playlists: Multiple Playlists: Supports working with multiple playlists simultaneously. Powerful View Settings: Allows data display customization, track grouping, and separate settings for each playlist. Content Protection: Provides the ability to block content from changes. File Search: Enables searching files across all opened playlists. AIMP 5.40 Build 2721 changelog: Audio converter: WavPack - support for 32-bit float samples format General: localizations has been updated General: WavPack codec has been updated to v5.9 Plugins: scrobbler - Last.fm - in case of an access denied error, the Track Info dialog displays links to web-version of the catalog Fixed: General - error creating a file in a folder created by template if the folder name ends with a dot Fixed: general - menu cannot be scrolled via mouse wheel if the "scroll inactive windows when I hover over them" option is switched off Fixed: General - port number is not extracted from URL if there is no "/" after the port token (regression 5.40) Fixed: audio converter - statistics are not taken into account if the "delete sources files" option is switched on and target folder equals to source Fixed: audio converter - dither does not switched off when processing files in 24-to-24-bit format Fixed: Sound engine - VST - changing the sample rate leads to certain plugins to hanging up Fixed: player - does not read disc numbers for CUE that specified as custom tag fields stored in the audio file Fixed: player - manual invoking the jump to next track action does not work if the next file is not exists and the "track repeat" option is switched on Fixed: plugins - BASS_AAC - does not play certain files to the end Fixed: plugins - CDDA - MusicBrainz - wrong artist name is extracted for certain releases Fixed: issues from incoming crash-reports Download: AIMP 64-bit | Standalone | ~20.0 MB (Freeware) Download: AIMP 32-bit | Standalone View: AIMP Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Notion is shutting down its email client one year after launch by David Uzondu In April 2025, Notion launched Notion Mail, an AI-powered email client that acted as a customizable overlay for your existing accounts. Instead of replacing Gmail entirely, it reimagined how users interacted with their inboxes by offering features like intelligent auto-labeling alongside automated calendar scheduling. Now, a little over a year later, Notion has announced that it is shutting it all down on September 22. Since Notion Mail is a frontend client, most of your Gmail data will remain safe inside your Google account, but the company said that you must export stuff specific to Notion Mail, like snippets, custom auto-label instructions, email drafts, and scheduled drafts, before the deadline. Starting today, June 25, you can export that data directly from the app or the web interface, and this grace period will last all the way until September 21. Once September 22 arrives, Notion will permanently delete all unsaved local assets, including files you attached to snippets. Your existing database syncs and mail blocks will persist, though they will stop receiving new messages after the shutdown. Notion advises that if you or your company operate within a regulated environment, you must transition off earlier than the general shutdown date to maintain compliance. Companies that rely on HIPAA coverage face an even tighter timeline and must transition away from the platform by June 30th. Notion, in its X announcement post, basically said that it doesn't see the point of maintaining a standalone email client, especially when users have shifted their habits toward automation. The platform pointed to its Notion agents, which it claims "more than half of Notion Mail users" already employ to manage emails without ever opening an actual inbox, so it is "going all in" on using these agents to run your inbox. Notion introduced Notion Agents last September at the "Make With Notion" conference, giving users AI-powered digital assistants that can do stuff like run in the background on specific schedules (e.g., summarizing your daily open tasks every morning at 8 AM).
    • OK, but isn't nvidia still planning to cut off win10 support this year?
    • Prime Day Deals: Save up to 50% on Samsung, Sandisk, and Lexar microSD cards by Fiza Ali Amazon Prime Day has brought discounts on a wide range of microSD cards from brands including Samsung, Sandisk, and Lexar, with savings of up to 50% across both the UK and US. Below, we've rounded up the best Prime Day microSD deals currently available, including discounted Samsung's T7, T9, and P9 Express series, SanDisk Ultra, Extreme, and Extreme PRO models, as well as Lexar PLAY PRO, and PLAY BLUE cards. 512GB Lexar PLAY PRO MicroSDXC Express Card: £94.98 (Amazon UK) - 41% off 64GB SANDISK Extreme microSDXC Card + SD adapter: £17.99 (Amazon UK) - 25% off 128GB SANDISK Extreme microSDXC Card + SD Adapter: £26.99 (Amazon UK) - 14% off 256GB SANDISK Extreme PRO microSD Card + SD adapter: £50.99 (Amazon UK) - 22% off 128GB Samsung T7 microSDXC Card: $32.99 (Amazon US) - 35% off 256GB Samsung T7 microSDXC Card: $51.99 (Amazon US) - 35% off 512GB Samsung T7 microSDXC Card: $94.99 (Amazon US) - 41% off 1TB Samsung T7 microSDXC Card: $239.99 (Amazon US) - 25% off 128GB Samsung T9 microSDXC Card: $36.99 (Amazon US) - 41% off 256GB Samsung T9 microSDXC Card: $57.99 (Amazon US) - 42% off 512GB Samsung T9 microSDXC Card: $104.99 (Amazon US) - 48% off 256GB Samsung P9 Express microSD Card: $39.99 (Amazon US) - 50% off 256GB SANDISK Ultra microSDXC UHS-I Card with Adapter: $41.78 (Amazon US) - 21% off 512GB Lexar PLAY BLUE microSDXC UHS-I Card: $79.99 (Amazon US) - 38% off 1TB Lexar PLAY BLUE microSDXC UHS-I Card: $159.99 (Amazon US) - 30% off 2TB Lexar PLAY BLUE microSDXC UHS-I Card: $279.99 (Amazon US) - 35% off Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. and U.K. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      Vistor earned a badge
      One Year In
    • First Post
      kinowa earned a badge
      First Post
    • Rookie
      krychek57 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      405
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      170
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      131
    4. 4
      Xenon
      72
    5. 5
      neufuse
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!