1-4 of 4 Answers
Hi, there. OLED Image Retention or Burn-In: Burn-in and image retention are possible on virtually any display. However, with an LG OLED TV, any risk of burn-in or image retention have been addressed through the use of technology that not only helps protect against damage to the screen, but features self-healing properties so that any short-term image retention that may occur is quickly rectified. ^Vanessa
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Interesting. I have a 2017 65" LG OLED TV and have not had any burn-in problems. We don't play games on it, nor watch cable news - which tends to have a static format. Maybe that is why? It would have helped to know what type of programming causes the burn-in. LG answered your question by stating that their newer technology has made this issue less of a problem.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have looked long an hard for an answer to this before buying my 77" G2. As I have a 2016 65" E6 with burn in. Everything I have read points to a heatsink having been installed on the G2 models. Like what Sony did last year. Plus the back cover is made from Aluminum. Which helps dissipates heat. Then there is the 5 year panel warranty on every LG OLED. So, I am more confident burn in won't be much of a factor. Time will tell.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have the same issue/concern and the posted reply from Vanessa doesn't really give a clear answer to igman's question - what exactly has LG improved over the past years? Those 'self healing' technologies incl. pixel refresh etc do not fix the burn-in I'm experiencing in my LG OLED. No doubt, this TV is wonderful to watch movies but horrible for channels with stagnant banners. I'm about to replace my LG OLED with a top-of the line non-OLED product.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
