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Posted by Enrico Frahn
 - February 23, 2022, 20:25:17
Quote from: James U on February 23, 2022, 19:51:42
Funny how you try to put him down by talking about anecdotal evidence and then you tell people that there's plenty of people on forms talking about it. Which is anecdotal evidence. It is well documented that burn in on OLEDs today is very rare. Your article makes it sound like it's a very common thing, and I'm assuming it's just so that you can earn some revenue from click through sales buying this TV you're pushing

Hi James,
as I already said, it's a technical fact that OLED panels can suffer from burn-in. No anecdotal evidence is needed for that. My article merely states that some buyers might want to avoid that danger, and there is absolutely no mention of OLED burn-in being a "very common thing".
Posted by James U
 - February 23, 2022, 19:51:42
Funny how you try to put him down by talking about anecdotal evidence and then you tell people that there's plenty of people on forms talking about it. Which is anecdotal evidence. It is well documented that burn in on OLEDs today is very rare. Your article makes it sound like it's a very common thing, and I'm assuming it's just so that you can earn some revenue from click through sales buying this TV you're pushing
Posted by Don
 - February 23, 2022, 02:26:34
LG C1. No burn in here either.
Posted by HD Everything
 - February 22, 2022, 23:33:31
I own a 65" Panasonic FZ950 OLED, and I play Modern Warfare for one or more hours every day, with not a trace of image retention. Just so your readers can imagine how many hours per day of static image it may take for image retention to be a factor, it would have to be more than that.
Posted by Enrico Frahn
 - February 22, 2022, 20:16:26
Quote from: PapaG on February 22, 2022, 18:26:59
"inherent burn-in risk"

I wonder if the author has ever been using an oled display for prolonged periods, because if he would then he 'd know that burn in requires serious misuse. Normal everyday usage will never cause burn in or any other visible degradation of the oled screen. I've been using an LG c9 oled for two years now and mostly we watch letterbox netflix films. Approx 4-6 hours every single day. Nor the letterbox nor the red netflix logo visible during movie browsing has had the faintest negative effect on the screen. So please don't write stupid things making people believe that there is a danger of burn in. There is not.

Hi PapaG,
thank you for your anecdotal evidence. It's a technical fact that even modern OLED panels can be susceptible to burn-in in certain use cases, and there are hundreds of forum threads and reports online that support this claim.

Video games and sports broadcasts for example include an abundance of static elements which can absolutely burn-in when the TV is used in a bright room. And that's not a case of "serious misuse", but a perfectly normal use case for many TV buyers.
Posted by PapaG
 - February 22, 2022, 18:26:59
"inherent burn-in risk"

I wonder if the author has ever been using an oled display for prolonged periods, because if he would then he 'd know that burn in requires serious misuse. Normal everyday usage will never cause burn in or any other visible degradation of the oled screen. I've been using an LG c9 oled for two years now and mostly we watch letterbox netflix films. Approx 4-6 hours every single day. Nor the letterbox nor the red netflix logo visible during movie browsing has had the faintest negative effect on the screen. So please don't write stupid things making people believe that there is a danger of burn in. There is not.
Posted by Redaktion
 - February 21, 2022, 20:58:30
With an impressive peak HDR brightness of over 1,200 nits, Sony's 65-inch LED flagship Bravia XR X95J is a worthy alternative for prospective buyers who would like to avoid burn-in-prone OLED panels with their new TV purchase.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Deal-Sony-s-incredibly-bright-65-inch-4K-HDR-LED-TV-flagship-X95J-is-now-on-sale-for-its-lowest-price-ever-on-Amazon.602276.0.html