It has to do with the refresh rate of your monitor and the settings on your video camera. The default setting on most monitors is typically 60 Hz which is also the frame rate of your camera. This causes the flickering you see. You can get around this by changing the refresh rate on your monitor to another of the available settings. May take a couple of trys, but experiment with it.
2006-12-07 03:02:26
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answer #1
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answered by Tater 3
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Because of the refresh rate, human eye can't see frames, instead cameras show old frames coming from the screen on their display. The monitor shouldn't flicker if you have a high refresh rate.
2006-12-07 10:49:01
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answer #2
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answered by skullmaniac16 2
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a monitor shows still images that refresh every x miliseconds. so does a tv / video, but they're not the same rates.
although they are both too fast for our brains to recognise that the image refreshes rather than moves, the fact that they are out of synch with each other causes us to see the flickers.
2006-12-07 10:49:18
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answer #3
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answered by mookvey 3
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the refresh rate of your monitor & the difference in the number of frames per seconds of your video camera, just like if you spin a wheel just the right speed the wheel seems to stop you can see the spokes clearly
2006-12-07 10:57:17
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answer #4
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answered by Dreamweaver 5
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Is has to do with the refresh rates of the camera and the monitor. They are off of each other, so you see a kind of wavy pattern on the monitor if you look at one on tv.
2006-12-07 10:48:40
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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There is an incompatibility between the scan rate of your screen and the video. one is scanning faster than the other, that is why you see lines on the playback.
2006-12-07 10:49:33
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answer #6
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answered by Bladerunner (Dave) 5
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because of the varying refresh rate of your computer screen, and the frame rate of the video
a similar phenomena occurs in your car: next time you're driving and you're checking your side mirror, look at the spinning wheels of the car beside you. you're side mirror vibrates from the motion of your car over the road at one rate, and the wheels of the car next to you spin at another rate, making their wheels look like they're turning backwards when looked at through the mirror
2006-12-07 11:01:47
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answer #7
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answered by ~ Mi$fitPrin¢ess ~ 3
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Your brain adapts to it. Just like regular light bulbs produce a yellowish caste, fluorescent, greenish, but you don't see it until you take a photo without the flash on.
2006-12-07 10:48:48
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answer #8
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answered by Clipper 6
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because the video lens can spot the screen because it is movimg too fast for the human eye!!
2006-12-07 10:49:06
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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you need a better video card
2006-12-07 12:09:31
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answer #10
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answered by dustin w 1
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