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Post by garbulky on Jan 20, 2021 18:35:44 GMT -5
The upcoming flagship LG Gallery OLED's are going to be brighter but they are going to be WRGB vs RGB. Is this a problem in terms of picture quality?
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Post by garbulky on Jan 22, 2021 12:12:18 GMT -5
Nobody knows if there is a difference? I plan to purchase a 75"+ LG OLED in the next few years. The Gallery OLED has my interest due to the increased brightness but I don't want it if the picture quality suffers.
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Post by indyscammer on Jan 22, 2021 15:49:57 GMT -5
I don't know and I've never compared (but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express). I Googled around a little (30 minutes or so). If the Samsung claims are real and LG does the white pixel by sacrificing total pixels then you loose resolution. If they have found a way to create the extra white subpixel without diminishing the total number of pixels in the display, then no. There is no real data out there (I could find) confirming or denying either way. What some people claim in reviews is that the white pixel tends to wash out the color balance of the rest of the pixel...colors appear more washed out.
What data I DID find showed that by adding the white subpixel, brightness was increased and allowed the other 3 (RGB) subpixels to run at lower out put power for the same brightness. OLED technology apparently IS susceptible to burn in much like plasma was. Driving pixels at lower power should help but not eliminate this issue.
All I can say is go and directly compare if these possibilities truely concern you.
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Post by garbulky on Jan 22, 2021 16:11:55 GMT -5
I don't know and I've never compared (but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express). I Googled around a little (30 minutes or so). If the Samsung claims are real and LG does the white pixel by sacrificing total pixels then you loose resolution. If they have found a way to create the extra white subpixel without diminishing the total number of pixels in the display, then no. There is no real data out there (I could find) confirming or denying either way. What some people claim in reviews is that the white pixel tends to wash out the color balance of the rest of the pixel...colors appear more washed out. What data I DID find showed that by adding the white subpixel, brightness was increased and allowed the other 3 (RGB) subpixels to run at lower out put power for the same brightness. OLED technology apparently IS susceptible to burn in much like plasma was. Driving pixels at lower power should help but not eliminate this issue. All I can say is go and directly compare if these possibilities truely concern you. Thanks. Yes I plan to audition them as much as I can, but as you know, a store environment is a poor one, as it is lit up and in "store calibration" mode. I have never spent big bucks on a TV and I am hoping that the upcoming tv purchase will last me a while.
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