Topic: Setting your monitor refresh rate for a smoother experience.
This guide is mostly for windows users with a 60 Hz display, but hopefully others will find it useful as well.
Most video source frame rate is 23.976, but most displays are 60 Hz. How do we get from 23.976 to 60?
SVP will multiply by 2.5 to get 59.94 which is not the best. Ideally we want SVP to be able to multiply by a nice round number.
This is where Custom Resolution Utility comes in.
The first thing to do is find out how high your monitor can be overclocked. Most 60 Hz monitors can be overclocked to around 75 Hz.
Start CRU, at the top make sure the drop-down is set to your monitor, and if you use an Nvidia GPU at the bottom change "default extension block" to "custom extension block."
In the Detailed Resolutions box delete anything that isn't 60 Hz, then click Add.
Change the Timing to LCD reduced, then in Refresh rate enter some starting place, you might want to try 75.
Click OK, and OK again to close CRU. Run the tool that comes with CRU called restart.exe, this will restart your display driver so you can use the new setting without a system restart.
Change your Windows settings to use the new refresh rate.
If your monitor shows an error like "outside of range" or similar, or you see artifacting, or this test reveals ghosting, then your monitor can't handle that refresh rate.
Go back to CRU, edit the detailed resolution you added, change to LCD reduced again, and change the refresh rate up or down. Repeat until you find your maximum refresh rate.
Once you know your max, you want to take the source frame rate of whatever you're watching and multiply it by an integer to find a number below your max. For me in the case of a 23.976 fps video, this is 23.976 x 3 = 71.928.
In CRU create a new detailed resolution for this refresh rate. You'll notice on the right of where you enter the refresh rate it says the actual refresh rate you will get, you might need to target slightly lower with what you enter, if it gets you closer to your desired refresh rate.
That's pretty much it! When you are watching something change your refresh rate to the one that suits your source frame rate. If you're watching something that has variable frame rate or weird encoding that confuses SVP, change your SVP settings to use the multiplier rather than using "to screen."