Thema:
Re:Nee, die blauen flat
Autor: Kilik2001
Datum:23.02.20 14:10
Antwort auf:Nee, die blauen von X1 Two

>[https://www.erikstechcorner.com/posts/2018/7/11/oled-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly]
>
>OLED panels have a shorter lifespan than LCD panels. As evident by the name (Organic Light Emitting Diode) they use an organic compound. This compound breaks down over time. This can be seen as ”burn in” effects that isn’t technically an image burned in, but rather uneven ageing. It’s better described as permanent image retention. The blue subpixels age quicker as blue light contains more energy. This gives the display a yellow tint that increases over time. This can be mitigated by calibration in devices where this is possible, and our vision compensates well for this so it can be hard to notice without a truly white reference. The bigger problem is the uneven aging across the display. For example, areas which show more blue light age quicker than areas that show less.


Ist aber nicht so bei den LG OLED TVs:

[https://www.rtings.com/tv/learn/real-life-oled-burn-in-test]

"The colors of the static areas. We found that in our 20/7 Burn-in Test the red sub-pixel is the fastest to degrade, followed by blue and then green."

[https://www.avsforum.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=2343674&d=1515612763]

2017 zu 2018:

Green : + 25% ,
Red : + 60% ,
Blue : something like +10%
White : +17%


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