If it’s not an issue as you lot love to claim they should cover it under warranty as I said earlier. Problem solved and a lot more people would buy them.
New wall brackets start from £40. If your potentially gonna spend £3k+ on an OLED, the wall bracket price is neither here nor there.Does anyone know why OLED TV's are only in 55 and 65 inch? I want to replace my 60 inch LCD TV but Im not downgrading in size and my wall bracket cant support no higher than 60 inch TV's. I have never seen an 60 inch OLED TV for sale.
Ordered 55" AF9 for the kitchen with JL price match at £2249If you're going Sony avoid the AF8, the cpu is underpowered which makes the OS slow and unresponsive.
The AF9 is mucho moolah at the moment, tough call to justify an extra £1k. It does have a better cpu, so doesn't have the problem of the AF8. It has the funky A frame type stand though - so if you put it on a cabinet it needs to be quite deep (39cm) and obviously will tilt backwards. If you wall mount its nearly twice the depth of other TVs.
Also note both the Sonys do not have HDR on the youtube app and apparently the other apps are a bit iffy. HDR isn't great either due to strong dimming.
Panasonics do not have dolby vision and some (if not all) only do 4k over 2 HDMI ports.
New wall brackets start from £40. If your potentially gonna spend £3k+ on an OLED, the wall bracket price is neither here nor there.
Its a pain the backside to fit a wall bracket in my house. Hence the reason why I don't to go through the hassle and mess taking down the current one to replace it with another.
Is your house made of glass or mud?
Gosh knows!
Putting a bracket up is literally 4 screws into a wall. So I don't see why it's hard
True but not all houses are built the same, mine was built in the 1910 so you can't just put up wall brackets around my house expecting it to hold. My current bracket has 8 heavy duty bolts.
Oh and here is proof that burn in is an issue still
Albeit it looks like they have improved a lot
https://www.avforums.com/threads/po...urn-in-note-your-vote-will-be-public.2197134/
you're right - philips site itself https://www.philips.co.uk/c-m-so/tv/p/oled-tv/plus is more direction of value added by p5 processor/bw sound/ambilight /google assistantwhether it is or it isn't about HDR10+ (dubious link at best) - the fact is they called it that to make it look like their OLED itself is better than anyone elses , when in fact its actually identical.
I don't think anyone has denied that it is still an issue, however, with proper/normal usage, it "shouldn't" be an issue. Be interesting to see the ones who have burn in, I'm betting their usage is something silly like 80% OLED light setting with 6+ hours of sky/cnn news every day........
If anything, that poll show it is very rare to happen on the 2017+ sets.....
To be fair, that poll does qualify itself that the 2017/18 models have by definition not been around as long, so any burn in issues that will turn up later in the lifespan of the panel won't have had time to show up... yet.
To be fair, that poll does qualify itself that the 2017/18 models have by definition not been around as long, so any burn in issues that will turn up later in the lifespan of the panel won't have had time to show up... yet.
which is why i chose the XF90. i don't want to have to baby the screen and be forced to vary my content, use screen cleaning every morning and night. then also use pixel orbiter, etc.
when you shift the pixels around it's really distracting. i have the tech on my plasma and i turned it off.
True that.
Still, even the 2016 models aren't bad and once again, chances are, more than likely the ones who have burn in have been reckless with their sets.
As for the bigger red sub-pixel, yes, it has been done in order to not only reduce likely hood of burn in but also help lengthen the life time, same was done with the 2017 sets iirc. Props to LG for doing this.
which is why i chose the XF90. i don't want to have to baby the screen and be forced to vary my content, use screen cleaning every morning and night. then also use pixel orbiter, etc.
when you shift the pixels around it's really distracting. i have the tech on my plasma and i turned it off.
It's quite an interesting statement that. I wonder what the dragons would say if you took an OLED into the studio and it was the first time anyone had seen one? They'd probably tell you to get out and stop wasting their time with impractical techMake the technology work and be robust for what it's going to be used for, then maybe I'll spend a couple of grand on it.