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TylerR
9
Jul 22, 2018
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I would warn anyone considering an OLED to be extremely careful. I own a 2016 OLED C6. Thing was my pride and joy out of the box. I picked up a new 5th gen Apple TV with support for Dolby vision and use directv now for my cable provider. I had the tv and appletv setup properly, but I walked out of the room to do some work in the the office and when I came back the picture had frozen. i immediately turned it off and ran the clear panel noise. Didn’t fix it. Now for any gray or white scenes, which there are a lot of I’m now realizing, have a big banner ghost across the picture. It bothered me to the point the OLED is now in the bedroom and picked up a 900F. I love this sony, but man did that OLED ruin LED for me. The slightest blooming irritates me. It does get crazy bright and the picture quality is great. Just be careful if you must have the OLED. My bottom line would be to wait until they sort it out. Yes the PQ is mind blowing, but I don’t want to have to babysit my tv for fear my $2000-$3000 will spontaneously catch fire.
Jul 22, 2018
JonnyModena
225
Jan 17, 2019
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TylerR2016 OLED should not be a deterrent for people buying 2019 OLEDs. You bought in on the tech early on and paid for it. New buyers are not having this issue... check YouTube. All the vids are old. Maybe 7 in total... Yet thousands of OLED TVs are sold each month. You got a lemon. Deal with it.
Jan 17, 2019
TylerR
9
Jan 18, 2019
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JonnyModenaWrong. OLEDs still have this issue. It’s an inherent issue with the tech as some pixels wear unevenly with bright static objects like news emblems and gaming HUDs. I advise you check your sources. I still think when it comes to picture quality OLED beats everything handily. However, they haven’t completely solved burn in. https://youtu.be/nOcLasaRCzY
Jan 18, 2019
JonnyModena
225
Jan 21, 2019
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TylerRUnless you work within the realm of OLED tv manufacturing or you have subject specific knowledge in the form of proof, you should keep your assumptions and blanket statements to yourself. We in the tech enthusiast industry appreciate fair warnings, but ones that have backing. I know 4 OLED owners. Of the 4, none have had any pixel degradation or burn in over the years. I am not saying that the issue doesnt exist. I am stating that the sheer lack of evidence in mass lends itself to the idea that it does not exist in EVERY panel on the market. Can you prove otherwise? Case in point; Stop spreading fear in the TV community. You got a bad panel aka a lemon. That does not mean that EVERY other OLED buyer will also.
(Edited)
Jan 21, 2019
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