Flickering, scrolling bands, or that weird strobe effect when you film an LED wall with your phone — these are almost always refresh rate issues. The good news is that most of them are fixable without replacing hardware. The bad news is that the settings are buried deep in the control software, and the default values are rarely correct for your specific setup.
This guide walks through how to actually debug and tune refresh rate on an LED display, from the basics of what refresh rate even means on an LED wall, to the step-by-step adjustments that kill flicker for good.
Most people think refresh rate is just "how many times the screen updates per second." That is true for monitors, but LED displays work differently. An LED wall does not have a single refresh rate. It has a scanning method, a data transmission rate, and a grayscale refresh rate — three separate values that all interact with each other.
The number you see advertised — 1920Hz, 3840Hz, 7680Hz — refers to the grayscale refresh rate. This is how fast the LED driver ICs can switch between brightness levels. Higher numbers mean smoother gradients, less flicker, and cleaner video playback. But if your data rate or scanning settings are misconfigured, even a 7680Hz panel will look terrible.
Grayscale refresh rate: how fast brightness levels cycle. This is the headline number.
Data transmission rate: how fast new frame data gets pushed to the panels. Usually measured in Mbps. If this is too low for your resolution, you get lag or tearing.
Scanning method: 1/16 scan, 1/8 scan, 1/4 scan, static. This determines how many rows light up simultaneously. Static scan gives the best image quality but needs more data bandwidth. 1/16 scan uses less bandwidth but can introduce flicker at lower refresh rates.
All three must be tuned together. Changing one without the others is like tuning one string on a guitar and expecting the whole thing to sound right.
Before touching any settings, you need to know what you are actually seeing. Flicker can come from multiple sources, and guessing leads to wasted time.
Point your smartphone camera at the LED wall and record a slow-motion video at 240fps or higher. If you see dark bands rolling across the screen, that is a refresh rate mismatch. If the bands move slowly, your grayscale refresh rate is too low for the camera's shutter speed. If the bands are fast and dense, your scanning method is the culprit.
This test does not tell you the exact number, but it tells you the direction. Slow rolling bands mean raise the refresh rate. Fast dense bands mean check your scan settings.
Open your LED control software — NovaStar, Colorlight, or whatever your system uses — and look at the current refresh rate setting. A lot of installers leave this at the factory default, which is often 1920Hz or even lower. For indoor walls viewed up close, you want 3840Hz minimum. For outdoor or large-format displays, 1920Hz may be enough depending on viewing distance.
Also check the data rate. If you are pushing 4K content at 60Hz through a system set to 600Mbps, you are bottlenecking the pipe. The refresh rate can be perfect, but the data cannot keep up, and you get stutter.
Now that you know what to look for, here is the actual debugging process.
Go into the control software settings and find the refresh rate or grayscale frequency option. Increase it in steps — from 1920 to 3840, then to 7680 if your hardware supports it. After each change, run the phone camera test again.
Watch for two things. First, do the rolling bands slow down or disappear? Second, does the image look smoother when you play video content? If bands disappear but video looks worse, your data rate may not support the higher refresh rate at your current resolution. Drop back one step and increase the data rate instead.
If raising the refresh rate does not kill the flicker, the scanning method is likely the issue. Switch from 1/16 scan to 1/8 or 1/4 scan. Each step up doubles the data bandwidth requirement, so make sure your sending card and cables can handle it.
Static scan eliminates flicker almost entirely but requires significantly more bandwidth. It is the right choice for high-end indoor installations where image quality is critical and the content is mostly static — presentations, dashboards, signage. For video-heavy content, 1/4 scan with a high refresh rate is usually the best compromise.
Some control systems let you adjust the output frequency independently from the grayscale refresh rate. This is the rate at which the sending card pushes frames to the receiving cards. If this is set to 60Hz but your content is 30fps, you get duplicate frames and judder. Match the output frequency to your content frame rate. For 60fps video, set output to 60Hz. For 30fps content, set it to 30Hz or enable a frame buffer to smooth the transition.
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