Devices > Video Cards, Monitors, Televisions, and Projectors

OLED Burn-In

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Hendrik:
Using an OLED with Windows Desktop will definitely still lead to burn in if you don't take care of it. Even the best OLEDs will have serious image retention issues. It might not be permanent, but even temporary retention can be quite bad and annoying.

When using a Windows PC on any OLED, be it TV or Monitor:
- Make sure the taskbar is set to auto-hide. Otherwise its an extremely static fixture on the display, and will be one of the first things to keep showing
- Try to avoid long periods of static images. Having MC up in Standard View for hours and hours might not be ideal, as unchanging elements can cause issues.
- Use screen saver/monitor off with relatively short timeouts

Personally, my PC connected to my OLED TV is largely running in Theater View only, which automatically dims on inactivity to help with burn-in, as well as using a relatively low screen-off timer. I have yet to see any retention due to these measures.
On the other hand, there is numerous reports of people using OLED PC screens who ignore such measures, where the taskbar and other permanent screen elements start being retained even after short periods.

In summary, OLEDs still need care to be taken. Using a short screen-off timer just in case you leave it on is the least I can recommend to avoid issues.

Inquisition:

--- Quote ---Personally, my PC connected to my OLED TV is largely running in Theater View only, which automatically dims on inactivity to help with burn-in, as well as using a relatively low screen-off timer.
--- End quote ---

So did i

eve:
I use JRiver on an OLED exclusively, both at my desk and also in the theater. I highly recommend setting your skin to Modern Cards Dark and then playing with 'skin effects' to push most of the interface down to 0 0 0 black (aka off) and darkening the text. I don't really use JRiver for much navigation itself (it's for video playback essentially) but with skin effects darkening the interface and not blasting your OLED pixel brightness, you should be good.


Also, windows?
1. Buttery taskbar (gets rid of the little couple pixel height bar when your taskbar is hidden)
2. Custom windows theme + your choice of theme patch. While windows has a dark mode, it leaves much to be desired and doesn't handle legacy windows apps. A custom theme will solve this but of course windows doesn't let you use unsigned themes
3. Fancy Zones. Hugely useful with the large surface offered by an oled. Besides allowing much more functional juggling of multiple windows, you're more likely to NOT be running applications full screen, and if you slightly vary your zone arrangement over time you can further cut down on burn in caused by static UI elements.
4. Dark Reader. Bright backgrounds on websites suck, especially on an OLED, this will auto darkmode pretty much any site with few if any negative side effects.
5. Don't use HDR for desktop stuff. It's not really there yet. SDR is perfectly fine for the web or work.
6. Set your OLED pixel brightness low if you're using it for desktop stuff, drastically cuts down on burn in and stops the searing highlights. My desk monitor in a dark room is at 35-45 typically.

TheShoe:
I have two LG OLED C6 sets which after several thousand hours of mix use (video games, Media Center, Apple TV) have not suffered any burn-in; once I saw mild image retention on one of the sets, but using the built-in screen clear tool it was gone.  I've got my family (kids in particular) well trained to not leave static images on the set; video games have honestly always been my greatest fear as static "hud" elements are common and gaming sessions can last hours.

For my third LG OLED set (fairly new, several hundred hours), with a lot of video gaming, no issues at all.

As Jim and others posted, for PC use I configure the video output to turn off after several mins. of no use.

I think with OLED it's much less of an issue now with sets also implementing some screen protection as well.


--

This is far and away much better than when I had a Plasma set (remember those?), which suffered image retention often, but was cleared over time and/or forced cleared with it's "screen wipe" feature.  Loved the set for color and pure black, but could not stand the image retention.


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