but then it is almost double the framerate!Īs far as I am concerned, ASUS have provided a 60hz IPS panel, which is within normal specifications for panels of this type. Areas where I can get 100hz (interiors mainly) are super silky smooth vs 60hz. I did a nintense Skyrim gaming session last night and zero problems whatsoever, seems 100% stable. Especially keep an eye out for "image persistence".Īlso, how is the gaming at 100hz on the laptop compared? Flickering or glowing or anything at all. Please keep us posted if you notice any issues with this. Part of what you pay for is that qualification of components. To guarantee that as a feature is extremely difficult because every display we buy must produce the correct result, for the life of the device in ~3 years time. You might be fine for a while, but it can degrade its life to some degree or you might get pixel inversion/color reproduction issues trying to refresh it too fast.
Like overclocking CPUs, you play the silicon lottery. But IPS that RELIABLY run at over 60Hz are extremely few and far between. It's less what we're willing to pay - for a gaming display of course we want to fit faster stuff as you - the TA - want to buy it. If you see it flickering it could be PWM backlight flicker, which can be offset sometimes by turning up the brightness.
#Asus g751jt overclock update#
CRTs scanned one pixel at a time, left to right, top to bottom, whereas LCDs update the entire display at once. How much of an improvement did you notice? Back in the CRT days going from 60Hz to 75+ was very noticeable. Or it was beyond what Asus was willing to pay for panels rated at 75Hz.