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ChrisF Posted Yesterday, 11:17 PM
That's not my understanding. Obviously, the LCD/DLP rear projection units handling overscan by optics do that but take for example a plasma or an LCD flat pannel. Let's just assume for the sake of argument that the pixel array is 1280x720 rather than a 768 or some varriant. If you feed a 1280x720 image and overscan crops 5% per side the display must rescale the leftover to spread accross the 1280x720 array - the number of pixels is fixed and always in view. Overscan adjustment hits the image before it ever reaches the array. Since the number of pixels is fixed and all are within view just behind a protective shield any overscaning of an image has to imply scaling whatever is left (less than the original 1280x720) accross the fixed 1280x720 pixels. I don't see any other way around it and I've posed the question before (not a popular one in flat pannel forums so always phrased nicely) and I've never once gotten a different response even when I've solicited info from some of the more knowledgable people on those forums.
BTW - nice to see some Steelers colors. I live in Pittsburgh but lucky for me I'm in FL for the next few weeks.
I dont know where you are getting this information but it is simply not true. A 720p signal actually has 750 active lines of resolution...the same amount of lines that a native 720p set actually draws on the screen...you just dont see them all because some of the lines are under the bezel. That would give you a 1:1 pixel map. Overscanning does not "cut-off" or actually crop image, as you say, its just hidden from view. And it certianly does not lead to scaling. Anytime the incoming signal matches the display mode you get a 1:1. Scaling to another resolution or an optical reduction would be the only way of losing a 1:1 mapping.