Forum Discussion
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, or any other time the refresh rate changes.
If "Auto-adjust display refresh rate" is set OFF, the Roku converts and sends everything at 60 fps and the TV doesn't have to adjust on the fly and you don't get those frame rate transition disruptions.
- decker122 years agoBinge Watcher
If you re-read my post, you'll see I am talking about 24.000 FPS content.
Not 60fps, not 59.94fps, not 29.97, not 23.976 content.
I'm not rounding up from 23.976 and just saying "24 FPS". I mean exactly 24.00 FPS. Twenty Four Point Zero Zero Zero FPS content.
The Roku Ultra does not support 24.00 FPS. If you play 24.00 FPS content - which there is plenty of right now (She Hulk, Rings of Power, Andor, Ashoka, etc) , it will stutter because the Roku Ultra does not support 24.00 FPS.
2021 Roku Ultra/2022 Streaming Stick 4K+ only support fractional refresh rates, so these shows are being output at 59.94Hz. This is preventing them from cleanly being converted to 59.94Hz via 3:2 pulldown, so because of that you're seeing regular and annoying micro-stutters every 40ish seconds, of a dropped frame to keep the video in sync with the audio.
That is the crux of my question. Why, after all these years, does the Roku Ultra not support 24.00 FPS?