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The screen will burn in easily. Most reviews say it's near impossible but I've got some for the past month or two. I came from a plasma with zero problems with burn in. This tv for some reason is more sensitive. I've seen test where they leave static images on this technology for more than 24 hours with no damage. I got nowhere near that kind of abuse to get mine. Maybe the panels vary in quality.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I dont know the exact answers for your questions, but I can tell you that the LG OLED B6P has a screen saver mode that it goes into when it senses a static picture. I paused Netflix once and came back to fireworks on my tv! Pretty cool.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I've heard (and was warned by the Geek Squad) that burn in is very real on these and to use a screen saver or turn off - don't leave any picture freeze framed or paused on screen for any length of time. I've read that life expectancy is adequate and should go 100,000 hours - a long time. You should be looking for an upgrade TV long before this goes out.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The TV does have a built-in screen saver if you leave it paused while using the TV apps. When watching shows from my Dish DVR the screen saver doesn't kick in so I try to be careful not to leave things paused too long. I've never seen a burn-in issue so far.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have heard of some burn in issues, but I have not had even so much as image retention that I have noticed yet. I use mine for all types of viewing (kids programming with the Disney/Nicktoons logo always on the screen, sports, video games, etc...) and haven't seen it yet. The panel does have some built in safeguards to help prevent this as well. I suppose time will tell, but so far I see no downfalls with my set
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