Paugge AOC Armored Halogen Free
Fiber Hdmi 2.1 Cable – 40m
Model Name: 8K60-HDMIFIBER-040ARM
– Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) Jacket
– Halogen Free
– LSZH: Low Smoke, Zero Halogen
Paugge AOC Fiber Hdmi 2.1 Cable Main Features
Paugge AOC Armored Fiber Hdmi 2.1 cable has excellent protection, excellent side compression resistance ,excellent flexibility and bending performance by Stainless Steel armored protective layer.
The halogen-free material is a material that does not contain a group of halogen elements (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astat). These fire elements release substances that are toxic to humans in the form of toxic fumes but also cause corrosion of metals. Halogen-free plastics are safer, and products from them are particularly convenient to collection and escape routes (public spaces, railway stations, theaters, cinemas, shopping centers, etc.). PVC or polyvinyl chloride is not a halogen-free material because it contains chlorine.
Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) in Wire and Cable Applications. Share. Thermoplastic polyurethanes (TPU) are a class of polyurethane plastics with many useful properties, including elasticity, transparency, and resistance to oil, grease and abrasion.
Low smoke zero halogen (LSZH) is a material classification typically used for cable jacketing in the wire and cable industry. LSZH cable jacketing is composed of thermoplastic or thermoset compounds that emit limited smoke and no halogen when exposed to high sources of heat.
The chipset in the connectors has at the input the function of transforming the electrical signal into a fibre optic signal, based on the sending of light pulses. At the output, the chipset has the reverse function of transforming the fibre signal into an electrical signal. This is the reason why the AOC HDMI cables are unidirectional with one connector that must always be connected to the emitter (source) and another one that is always connected to the receiver (display).
HDMI® Specification 2.1 is the most recent update of the HDMI specification and supports a range of higher video resolutions and refresh rates including 8K60 and 4K120, and resolutions up to 10K. Dynamic HDR formats are also supported, and bandwidth capability is increased up to 48Gbps.
Supporting the 48Gbps bandwidth is the new Ultra High Speed HDMI Cable. The cable ensures ultra high-bandwidth dependent features are delivered including uncompressed 8K video with HDR. It features exceptionally low EMI (electro-magnetic interference) which reduces interference with nearby wireless devices. The cable is backwards compatible and can be used with the existing installed base of HDMI devices.
Enhanced Gaming Features
One of the highlights from the HDMI 2.1 specification’s multiple gaming and media features is Variable Refresh Rate. VRR reduces or eliminates lag, judder and frame tearing for more fluid and better detailed gameplay. VRR enables a gaming source such as a console or computer to deliver video frames as fast as it can, which in many cases is slower than the normal static refresh rate.
Graphics processors require different absolute periods to render each frame, and this time is dependent upon the complexity of the scene, the horsepower of the GPU, the resolution selected and the frame rate. When the GPU is taxed by the other three factors and does not finish rendering the next frame by the time it needs to be displayed, the source must either repeat the current frame or display the partially-rendered next frame, which causes judder and tearing.
Auto Low Latency Mode enables the ideal latency setting to automatically be set allowing for smooth, lag-free and uninterrupted viewing and interactivity. In many cases this is referred to as game mode, and it usually has to be set manually which involves going through menus and settings and then switching back again for normal viewing. ALLM lets a game console, PC or other device send a signal to the display which will cause it to automatically switch to a low-latency, low-lag mode for gaming. This could benefit other uses, such as karaoke and video conferencing too.
HDMI 2.1 features Quick Media Switching for movies and video which eliminates the delay that can result in blank screens before content is displayed. QMS uses the VRR mechanism to eliminate the blackout period when all devices in the HDMI connection chain change video modes. As long as the resolution remains the same and only the frame rate changes, QMS will smoothly switch between frame rates. For example, when looking at trailers from a streaming service, some may be in 24Hz, 50Hz, or 60Hz. Every time a trailer with a different frame rate is selected, the entire system must change its clocking and re-sync, causing an A/V blackout (a “bonk”). Knowing that a change-of-video mode causes bonks, streaming services may compensate and add a built-in delay so that users don’t miss the first part of the trailer. Or they may output everything at the same frame rate which requires either the streaming service to provide single-frequency streams or the streaming box to perform the conversion. QMS eliminates bonks by using the VRR mechanism to change frame rates, allowing rapid, smooth changes from a nominal 60Hz rate to any media rate below it (down to 24Hz). The viewer never sees blank screens and gets a seamless experience.
Another highlight from the HDMI 2.1 specification’s multiple gaming and media features is Quick Frame Transport. QFT reduces latency for smoother no-lag gaming, and real-time interactive virtual reality. QFT transports each frame at a higher rate to decrease “display latency”, which is the amount of time between a frame being ready for transport in the GPU and that frame being completely displayed. This latency is the sum of the transport time through the source’s output circuits, the transport time across the interface, the processing of the video data in the display, and the painting of the screen with the new data. This overall latency affects the responsiveness of games, such as how long between a button is pressed to the time at which the resultant action is observed on the screen. While there are a lot of variables in this equation, not many are adjustable from an HDMI specification perspective. QFT operates on the transport portion of this equation by reducing the time it takes to send only the active video across the cable. This results in reduced display latency and increased responsiveness.
High Performance Hdmi Cable for the Professional Products
The HDMI output of the Apple TV 4K is hdmi 2.0a and supports 18 Gbps bandwidth. Paugge hdmi 2.1 cable has 48 Gbps bandwidth, thanks to its superior quality for 4K 60Hz, HDR, Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos as you can take advantage of the most excellent features by Apple TV 4K. For HDR and Dolby Vision, HDMI cable must support hdmi 2.1, hdmi 2.0a or hdmi 2.0b. Standart hdmi 2.0 cables do not support HDR and Dolby Vision. It should be kept in mind that many unqualified and fake cables, which do not support HDR and Dolby Vision, are sold on the market as hdmi 2.0 Paugge hdmi 2.1 cable supports receive images on your Apple TV 4K in the following formats; 4K SDR 60Hz YCbCr 4: 4: 4 4K SDR 60Hz RGB High 4K HDR 60Hz YCbCr 4: 2: 2 4K HDR Dolby Vision
The HDMI output of the SHIELD TV Pro is hdmi 2.0b and supports 18 Gbps bandwidth. Paugge hdmi 2.1 cable has 48 Gbps bandwidth, thanks to its superior quality for 4K 60Hz, HDR, HDR10, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos as you can take advantage of the most excellent features by Shield TV. For HDR, HDMI cable must support hdmi 2.1, hdmi 2.0a or hdmi 2.0b. Standart hdmi 2.0 cables do not support HDR. It should be kept in mind that many unqualified and fake cables, which do not support HDR, are sold on the market as hdmi 2.0.