OLED TV vs LCD TV - See why OLED is a much better technology and how its becoming the next big thing.
OLED TVs and Displays
OLED TVs and Information
OLED information
What is OLED?

OLED Displays

OLED TV's

OLED Monitors

How OLED Works

OLED TV vs Plasma TV

OLED TV vs LCD TV

OLED Technology Links



Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

OLED TV`s vs LCD TV`s

CONTRAST / BLACK LEVELS
OLED TVs excel in the contrast and black levels, far exceeding the LCD TVs. The contrast ratio stated for a new Sony OLED TV has been 1,000,000:1 when compared with the contrast highest stated for an LCD TV of 10,000:1. While both these contrast ratios are unrealistic for the actual TV viewing calibration, they are the indicators of how superior the OLED is in the category. Since there isn’t any backlighting required for the OLED TVs, it is very easy to obtain the deep black levels by constricting the conductivity to emissive organic compounds. This lets for rich deep black levels. Just as the plasma technology OLED display uses very less power as very less light is required. Bright and white colors will need the power most, so to produce the bright whites much current flows through to those emissive organic compounds. The Liquid Crystal Diode (LCD) displays, in contrast, use the electric charges to untwist and twist the liquid crystals that cause them to block the light and, so, emit the blacks. The more the voltage passes through those liquid crystals in the given pixel, more the crystals untwist fully and effectively block the light – making the pixels darker. Like opposed to the plasma, the LCD TVs utilize the maximum power while displaying the black or very dark image.

VIEWING ANGLES
The OLED TV screens is perfect in the viewing angle. The OLEDs create the light rather than blocking the light. Every pixel is independently lit and that light is seen from the viewing angles off axis accurately and easily, much to the same as the plasma. As the result, we can expect the perfect viewing angles of about 170 degrees.

The manufacturers of LCD TV have done a lot to improve the viewing angles of their displays, but this is the area of the constant struggle. The LCD TVs should block the light to create the darker images, thus the contrast suffers significantly at the angles. The substrate material on the newer-generation models of LCD by Sony and Sharp has helped a lot to expand these viewing angles of these units.

COMPUTER USE
Sony is the first to introduce the 1st OLED screens to for sale in the U.S. The display is 11” and would be sold as the computer monitor primarily, though it has the HDMI input. The resolution on this 1st SONY OLED TV XEL-1 is the 960 X 540. The Computer graphics demands for more resolution and as the result this might hurt the sales of this offering. Samsung, alternatively, claims to make the 17” AMOLED that is a bit thicker but contains a UXGA resolution of 1600 X 1200. The resolution puts the OLED squarely in the space of LCDs for the computer use. The LCD monitors display the images from VGA sources or the computers extremely well, with a full color detail, no scren burn-in, no flicker. Moreover, the quantity of pixels every square inch on the LCD display is higher than the other technologies, so the LCD monitors are particularly good at displaying very large data amounts– for instance the graphics applications and with the exceptional precision and clarity. For this same reasons, the LCD TVs is even a better template for the video gaming slightly. Since the LCDs functioning as the computer screens are viewed from the straight on, contrast problems and the viewing angle are minimized.

 



OLED TV's and OLED Displays - Your source for anything OLED!