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I did just that after I noticed that I was now seeing the black screen in other shows and apps. (Hulu - Welcome to Wrexham as an example) and that did not fix the problem. Latest update was 12/20, maybe that has something to do with it?
More additional information. I paused the show I was watching (Hulu - Welcome to Wrexham) while I was doing something else, and the screen went black for a second WHILE THE VIDEO WAS PAUSED. I think this is something wrong with the TV itself, software or hardware, and not the Prime app specifically. This just started happening recently, so I wonder if it had to do with the update on 12/20?
- makaiguy7 months agoCommunity Streaming Expert
mb88-
I'm not sure if this applies to Roku TVs:
Under "Settings > System > Advanced system Settings > Advanced display settings" does your Roku have an "Auto-adjust display refresh rate" item? If you don't have this setting, don't bother to read the rest of this post.
If this is enabled, the Roku circuitry sends the signal output at the refresh rate used by the original source material, commonly 24 fps (frames per second), 25 fps, 30 fps, 50 fps, or 60 fps. Every time the source refresh rate changes, the TV must adjust its display to accommodate the new rate, which on many sets results in a short blackout or other display disruption that some find objectionable.
This can happen when starting/stopping new programs, when going in/out/between commercials, wherever the refresh rate of the source material changes.
If "Auto-adjust display refresh rate" is set OFF, the Roku converts and sends everything at 60 fps so the TV doesn't have to adjust on the fly and you don't get those frame rate transition disruptions.
The tradeoff here is that, non-60 fps sources may not appear as smooth without a Roku refresh rate adjustment, depending on whether your Roku or your TV does a better job of refresh rate conversion. You have to decide whether this change is worth it to you.