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The LG - 65" Class C5 Series OLED evo AI 4K UHD Smart webOS TV (2025), Model # OLED65C5PUA, and the OLED55C5PUA both use the same LG OLED evo panel, which uses advanced materials (often involving deuterium) that allow the pixels to run brighter while reducing the risk of burn-in. The issue is not how many hours you can continuously watch the TV to avoid burn-in. Burn-in occurs due to the uneven, premature aging of organic light-emitting diodes (pixels) that have been subjected to static images for prolonged periods at high brightness. So if you are not watching static images (like channel logos or taskbars) that are displayed for prolonged periods, especially at high brightness levels, you will not get burn-in, and if you watch a lot of varied content, without long-lasting, static pictures, you are less likely to experience burn-in. Lower the brightness and contrast settings on the TV. Higher settings can accelerate the degradation of OLED pixels. If you are using an OLED screen for prolonged periods, turn it off or change the content regularly to give the pixels a break, enable integrated features that are designed to mitigate burn-in, like pixel shifting or screen dimming, or the LG OLED logo luminance adjustment (or "Adjust Logo Brightness") which is a protective feature found in the OLED Panel Care menu (Settings > General > OLED Care) that dims static on-screen elements (logos, banners, HUDs) to prevent permanent image retention. It offers "Off," "Low," and "High" settings, with "High" providing the most aggressive protection. Lower the brightness and contrast settings on your device. Higher settings can accelerate the degradation of OLED pixels...^Ivan.
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