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We went with QLED three years ago, because OLED could burn in.
And the fact that LG service is/was hard to get.
Here's a comparison.
https://www.cnet.com/tech/home-entertain...d-vs-oled/
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We have both and the primary difference for me is contrast. OLEDs have whiter whites, deeper blacks. More intense color saturation. HDR video really pops.
Picture quality is quite noticable...as it should be for the price difference. We've had an LG 65" for about three years, no issues.
Now all of this is my experience. My wife doesn't see the difference....
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OLED has the best picture by miles - but you'll pay for it.
Right now the king of value is the LG C2 series.
n.b. barnowl speaks of hard to get service.............my experience has been if a tv needs service , it is ultimately headed to the trash can. And secondly a tv servicer with good reviews would give me pause about buying that brand in the first place. Remember the napping "Maytag Man" ? That's the brand I want.
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(04-21-2023, 01:22 PM)barnowl Wrote: We went with QLED three years ago, because OLED could burn in.
And the fact that LG service is/was hard to get.
Here's a comparison.
https://www.cnet.com/tech/home-entertain...d-vs-oled/
Thanks for that link. I've been wondering about the differences between LED flavors.
Our 12 year old Samsung is beginning to have issues and I'd like a "smarter" tv so I'm not streaming from my laptop through the HDMI cable. I'm a big fan of Samsung TVs and phones, so I'll stick with the brand for the new TV.
Ray
(formerly "WxMan")
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04-22-2023, 04:43 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-24-2023, 07:06 AM by Cabinet Monkey.)
burn in is a red herring for those that run around scared of everything in life.
CRTs - ( your old tube tv's )were susceptible to burn in too. Did you ever have a problem with any of those ?
Iffin you were planning on using this as a commercial billboard (restarunt menu) or arcade machine screen - then yea, you might have cause for concern. But if you're just gonna watch tv a couple of hours a day - IT AIN"T GONNA BE A PROBLEM
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I've had one for several years. They are awesome. The contrast is amazing, and the difference for that is particularly noticable in a few scenes in movies.
My TV is in a living room with windows. Never had a problem with brightness (though the room isn't the brightest to start with).
I'd only be worried about burn in if you watched a specific channel frequently that had something static on an area of the scene that was always there. The closest we have come is some video games, but haven't noticed any problems yet.