📱

Read on Your E-Reader

Thousands of readers get articles like this delivered straight to their Kindle or Boox. New articles arrive automatically.

Learn More

This is a preview. The full article is published at techradar.com.

Forget burn-in - a long-term test says OLED TVs may be the most reliable buy

Forget burn-in - a long-term test says OLED TVs may be the most reliable buy

By Carrie MarshallLatest from TechRadar

Are OLED TVs or LED TVs more reliable? A long-term test says burn-in isn’t the biggest concern News Carrie Marshall published Is burn-in real? Yes. Should you worry? Probably not compared to other issues A 3-year test of OLED TVs showed burn-in is highly unlikely with mixed viewing Edge-lit LCDs appear to fail before other kinds of TV in the test No clear correlation between price and longevity, however When I was a teenager I used to devour scary stories, but nothing I read was as scary as the tale of the OLED with burn-in. You're probably familiar with it too: it's a tale of someone who buys one of the best OLED TVs only to see the logo of their favorite channel, or the HUD of their favorite game, burnt into the display forever. But like many cautionary tales, the likelihood of this happening may be smaller these days than the stories suggest. That's what the results of an ongoing study by Rtings say, anyway. The folks there have been running over 100 TVs at maximum brightness for three years, racking up 18,000 viewing hours for each one. And while some OLEDs did indeed suffer issues, LCDs suffered far more serious problems. How do OLED and LCD TVs handle nearly 20K viewing hours? The ongoing testing has demonstrated several things, most notably that lower-end edge-lit LCD TVs appear to fail sooner than LCDs with better kinds of backlighting: the tested models suffered from warped reflector sheets, cracked light guide plates and burnt-out LEDs due to the heat they generate - although it's important to note that these tests run the TVs at maximum brightness, which isn't necessarily how you'd do it at home. That makes this a television torture test. As of November 2025, 20 of the 100 TVs that started their testing in 2022 had failed completely, and a further 24 had experienced partial failures. The site has published full details of those failures and partial failures here . What about OLEDs? Rtings found that both WOLED and QD-OLED TVs performed "exceedingly well", and while burn-in did develop during the torture test that shows a single logo on the screen for the entire time, that "isn't really an issue under mixed usage". Every OLED tested did develop burn-in, but previous testing found that unless you constantly watch content with static logos you're unlikely to encounter any issues with models from 2022 or later. It's also worth noting that 18,000 hours of runtime is much more than most people will watch before upgrading their TVs: if you watched TV for three hours every day, it'd take you over 16 years to reach that figure. So what does this mean for would-be TV buyers? While many of the entry-level TVs did fail over time, Rtings found no direct correlation between price and longevity. But it did find that OLEDs tended to be the most reliable and edge-lit LCD the least, so if you're in the market for a new TV...

Preview: ~500 words

Continue reading at Techradar

Read Full Article

More from Latest from TechRadar

Subscribe to get new articles from this feed on your e-reader.

View feed

This preview is provided for discovery purposes. Read the full article at techradar.com. LibSpace is not affiliated with Techradar.

Forget burn-in - a long-term test says OLED TVs may be the most reliable buy | Read on Kindle | LibSpace