- Oct 9, 1999
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Picked up a new TV to add to my gaming PC. An LG 65" C8 OLED. So far it has been great. Have to get use to ABL, but it's not as bad as previous years models.
Automatic Brightness Limiter.
It help with the longevity of the panel. OLED has a finite longevity since it is organic. The longer the display is kept static on a bright image, the shorter the pixel life. ABL is automatic and is used to limit the brightness in order to prevent burn in. There is no way to turn it off. Either through the main menu or the service menu. It's common to all OLED displays. Even the limited availability Dell OLED monitor from a short while ago had it.
I've had this TV for 6 weeks now and I can say I'm absolutely in love with it. You can see why these are priced $3K+ after you've used one for a while. Going from using an LCD display from an OLED is a very noticeable difference.
I have no screen burn in. I play a variety of games with a mix of movies. It has been 80% PC and 20% Netflix/Prime. The most gaming has been with Subnautica at 35+ hours. This game has a constant static HUD with bright colors.
I have the display using Standard (User) with the following:
Input is labled as PC
90 OLED light
80 Contrast
50 Brightness
20 Sharpness
60 Color
0 Tint
C20 Color Temp
Medium Gamma
High Black Level
Motion Eye Care and TruMotion are off
Energy Saving is off
Eye Comfort Mode off
HDMI Ultra HD Deep Color mode is of course on for 4:4:4 Chroma
Thanks for the reply. I ended up keeping the TV. Went to Rtings.com posting the same topic and one of the reviewers mentioned there was a firmware update that addressed this issue in the fall. So all those comments I read were all prior to the update. Went into one of the expert modes tweaked settings.@muskyx1
Can't say that I have that problem. I don't use HDR all that often in PC mode. When I do it works just fine.
HDR works in Windows 10 for me. It jacks up the brightness on whites on the desktop pretty considerably. It doesn't look washed out. It does force ABL to kick in much sooner. It's near impossible to show the true image quality through a photo, but here it is anyway.
Off:
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On:
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