Samsung and LG Display stopped negotiating cheaper OLED panels – Image and sound – News


LCD also has degradation, often worse than OLED, only this is less noticeable. With LCD, this translates into degradation of the back-lights. With an LCD, complete zones degrade differently from each other. This translates into light/dark spots. Normally this is not so noticeable, certainly not the average consumer.

For burn-in with OLED you can check the tests from RTINGS. They test this extensively. This shows that burn-in hardly occurs with recent models in recent years, only in extreme situations where, for example, you have the same logos in the picture for a long time, or, like CNN, the news tickers at the bottom of the screen. But really only if you have that image on very often and for a long time.

Burn-in with OLED actually no longer occurs. LG’s technology, and in my case, Panasonic, which uses an LG panel, has grown enough by now.

Also see:
https://www.rtings.com/tv/learn/real-life-oled-burn-in-test
Only in extreme cases can you suffer from burn in. Advice, never turn up the brightness and don’t use OLED if you play a lot of static content, such as CNN, or games where part of the screen is always the same.

LG OLED C7:
FINAL FINDINGS (UPDATED 05/31/2019 – 9064 HOURS)
Update 05/31/2019: The TVs have been running for over 9000 hours (around five years at 5 hours every day). Uniformity issues have developed on the TVs displaying Football and FIFA 18 and are starting to develop on the TV displaying Live NBC. Our stance remains the same: we don’t expect most people who watch varied content without static areas to experience burn-in issues with an OLED TV.

[Reactie gewijzigd door KoffieAnanas op 29 juli 2022 22:01]