I have an LED and plasma, and it's not just deeper blacks that are better, but colors are more vivid as well. LEDs looked washed out by comparison. And you can get screen burn in an LED, just not nearly as easy as a plasma.
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>get a burn in on a LED TV Good luck accomplishing that. Burn in's on plasmas are the fluoriscing gas keeping the color they displayed for too long. LED TVs are based on RGB LEDs which each represents a pixel. The colour is determined with the amount of current you let into each colour or a PWM. It is literally impossible to get a burn in on a LED TV.
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Not sure why some will come with a warning then...
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Well I am an electrical engineer and it seemed literally impossible to me, but knowing that everyone can be wrong I looked it up myself a bit. Seems like you can, but it's not the same "burn in" as in plasmas. It has to do with the lifetime of the single LEDs. But you basically can avoid that by using the right settings, and even if you don't, you'll have to keep your TV on with the same image 24/7 over weeks. And this won't happen by chance.
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Edited by sergeantawesome: 2/3/2015 2:24:11 PMI have one of each, and that is the extent of my knowledge. I will say that I think that warning is only to cover their asses because I have abused my LED and have not seen burn in. To me it's just my preference is with plasma. Just side by side it looks better to me.
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Colours are more vivid/brighter in led than plasma. Plasma are darker hence the better blacks.
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Edited by sergeantawesome: 2/3/2015 11:17:06 AMI would like to argue that. I have seen my plasma next to LEDs in stores and at home, big difference. The LED TV is brighter I'll give you that.
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It all depends on settings. Shop TVs are set on demo. The best you can get out of a TV set are with leds.