How many have actually experienced burn in?
I keep hearing about the risks of burn in on RPTVs, which makes me really nervous for my TV. I like to do two things that risk burn in: video games and watch tv shows in their proper 4:3 format. I have cut down my time on these two activities after hearing so much about burn in. Yet I have never seen anyone on these forums say that they actually experienced burn in on their tv.
Has anyone here actually got burn in on their RPTV? If so, describe the events that caused it. PS- I did a search on the forum and couldn't find a thread asking about others' experiences with burn in. |
Re: How many have actually experienced burn in?
Originally posted by William Wallace PS- I did a search on the forum and couldn't find a thread asking about others' experiences with burn in. http://www.dvdtalk.com/forum/showthr...hreadid=249841 Burn-in is not caused by the intensity of the brightness. It is caused by long-term differences in brightness between different parts of the picture. If you always had your brightness and contrast turned up, but you varied the picture material, you would not get burn-in, you would just get tubes that had a shorter lifespan or prematurely burned out tubes. Higher brightness, and especially contrast, speed up the burn-in of static images on the screen. In the other thread where you thought grey bars would cause more burn-in, you were incorrect. The grey is there to minimize the difference between the average brightness/contrast of the actual 4:3 picture and the bars. Stare at some black and white block letters for about 5 minutes. Then look away at a white ceiling. You will have temporarily burned-in that image into your retinas. Then stare at a light piece of paper for 5 minutes and look away again. No burn-in. RPTV burn-in just isn't that temporary. |
Has anyone here actually got burn in on their RPTV? If so, describe the events that caused it |
Re: Re: How many have actually experienced burn in?
Originally posted by X Stare at some black and white block letters for about 5 minutes. Then look away at a white ceiling. You will have temporarily burned-in that image into your retinas. |
Burnt out crts
I have seen it often in front projection models. Takes thousands of hours to do it, though.
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yeah, the main reason burn-ins happen is accidentaly leaving your tv on when you leave, this is the quickest way to burn in a fixed image, not to mention wear out your projection.
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is burn in easier to get on a plamsa than a rptv.
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