If you are in the market looking to invest in a new television set, the first thing you have to do is choose the right panel and lighting combos. Gone are the days when television sets were all made with the same technology and boasted only a few features.
TV has become an
important part of every household’s daily life, and with that, it is important
that you understand each and pick the one that suits your needs the best. The
two-panel combinations that stand above the rest as of now are QLED and OLED. Before
you can make a decision between the two, it is vital you learn the features of
each, what they stand for, and how they can be different.
What Do You Understand By QLED?
Short for Quantum
Light-Emitting Diode, a QLED TV can be compared to a standard LED TV. The only
difference between the two is that the former uses smaller nanoparticles or
quantum dots to change the colour and brightness of the display. Much like a
standard LED TV, a 75 inch QLED TV monitor also
produces light using a backlight consisting of hundreds of LEDs, sitting behind
a conventional LCD panel.
The panel, which
is made up of thousands of small shutters, opens and closes quickly, in tandem
with colour filters to develop a picture you see. The perfect tonal quality is
achieved by letting out only the right amount of colour and light that finally
reaches your eyes. This is quite a smart system but heavily relies on the use
of a shutter and dimming LED backlights. Due to both of these having to work in
synergy to provide accurate on-screen colours and blacks, a poorly made product
might see some failure.
What Do You Understand By OLED?
Although OLED is
an abbreviation of Organic Light-Emitting Diode, this has nothing to do with
LED backlight technology. Instead, it means every last pixel in an OLED panel
has its own small LED light. The difference is that all these LED lights are
extremely thin and can produce both colour and light in a single element. In
simpler terms, OLED panels do not rely on backlight technology, as each pixel
can produce its own light.
While there are
many advantages of this design, the most notable one is the deeper blacks.
While a LED or QLED TV will have to dim the backlight or block it with
shutters, the OLED panel will simply turn off the pixel. With the pixel off, no
colour or light will get emitted, making that part of the screen as dark as it
would be when the TV itself was turned off.
Which Technology Is Better?
While, at first
glance, it might seem like OLED television sets are the better choice, there
are many other considerations that you should keep in mind. Both TV technologies
have come with their own benefits and difference, some of which are further
mentioned below. Which one will suit you better solely depends on what you are
looking for in your purchase.
·
Price:
This is one
segment in which QLED TVs are the winners. QELD TVs often have more options in
the affordable range, whereas you will only find some variations of OLED TVs in
that same range. In addition, you will find more variants of QLED TVs when it
comes to their picture processing technology, build and design, which is often
not the case with OLED models. While both OLED and QLED TV price increases with
the size and picture quality you are going for, QLEDs give you better options.
·
Brightness:
If you are
looking for the brightest screens in the industry, QLED TVs are the best choice
for you. Since these panels use separate backlights instead of relying on
individual pixels, they can get incredibly bright. In addition to that, the
quantum dot’s ability to maximise brightness by producing better hues in the
colour spectrum without losing any saturation also has a role to play in this.
With a QLED TV, you will get a panel that is bright enough to view in some of
the most brightly lit rooms as well.
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