Deal Editor Note: There is no way to verify stock but since this deal is performing very well with the community and members are reporting success, we have decided to promote this deal as a Heads up to those who would like to check In-Stores for stock.
Select Sam's Club Stores (link for reference): has for
Members:
65" LG Class 4K Ultra HD OLED Smart TV w/ AI ThinQ (OLED65BXAUA) on sale for
$999.91.
Offer is valid In-Stores only.
Thanks community member
IndigoCrib274 for sharing this deal
Offer Notes:
- This is available In-Stores Only at Select Sam's Club Stores
- Must be an Active Sam's Club Member to purchase
Specs:
- Resolution: 3840x2160
- Refresh Rate: 120Hz (Native) OLED Motion Pro
- Processor: A7 Gen 3 AI Processor 4K with AI Picture Pro & AI Sound Pro
- Cinema HDR (Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG), Dolby Vision IQ, HDR Dynamic Tone Mapping Pro
- G-Sync and Free-Sync Compatible
- Smart Platform: webOS
- Ports:
- 4x HDMI
- 3x USB 2.0
- 1x RF/Cable
- 1x Ethernet
- 1x RS-232C
- 1x Digital Audio Output
- 1x Headphone Out
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Where'd you get that data?
Where was t
Where'd you get that data?
https://www.bluecinetec
Look at the bright side. It was a good deal with 4 yrs warranty along with a 60 day return policy.
Honestly, not too worried regd burn in or buying one with a lot of screen hours.
So far its good with no sign of burn in or any dead pixels.
I read off the internet.Here is one link. It says around 5k hrs.
https://www.bluecinetec
Look at the bright side. It was a good deal with 4 yrs warranty along with a 60 day return policy.
Honestly, not too worried regd burn in or buying one with a lot of screen hours.
So far its good with no sign of burn in or any dead pixels.
Hmm....Ok. Never heard those numbers before. I'd like to see where they got their data. Sounds made up, but anywho...
Oled burn in is 100% user error.
Don't leave the same content on the screen for days at 100% peak brightness. It was the same thing with CRT "tube" tv's, if you're old enough to remember those. Those are what "screen savers" were invented for.
Google Rtings burn in test. There are several others as well. Just watch varied content and you'll be fine. I have an OLD 55" B6 and a OLD 65" B8 zero burn in. I don't play video games and I watch "varied" content.
I had plasma tv's before the oled's. Zero burn in on them, but you'll read lots of fear mongering "burn in" posts about them from 10 years ago if you google it. My parents are still watching their 51" Samsung plasma TV daily as their "main" TV, that I bought them for Christmas like 10 years ago. Zero burn in.
Oled burn in is 100% user error.
Don't leave the same content on the screen for days at 100% peak brightness. It was the same thing with CRT "tube" tv's, if you're old enough to remember those. Those are what "screen savers" were invented for.
Google Rtings burn in test. There are several others as well. Just watch varied content and you'll be fine. I have an OLD 55" B6 and a OLD 65" B8 zero burn in. I don't play video games and I watch "varied" content.
I had plasma tv's before the oled's. Zero burn in on them, but you'll read lots of fear mongering "burn in" posts about them from 10 years ago if you google it. My parents are still watching their 51" Samsung plasma TV daily as their "main" TV, that I bought them for Christmas like 10 years ago. Zero burn in.
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Oled burn in is 100% user error.
Don't leave the same content on the screen for days at 100% peak brightness. It was the same thing with CRT "tube" tv's, if you're old enough to remember those. Those are what "screen savers" were invented for.
Google Rtings burn in test. There are several others as well. Just watch varied content and you'll be fine. I have an OLD 55" B6 and a OLD 65" B8 zero burn in. I don't play video games and I watch "varied" content.
I had plasma tv's before the oled's. Zero burn in on them, but you'll read lots of fear mongering "burn in" posts about them from 10 years ago if you google it. My parents are still watching their 51" Samsung plasma TV daily as their "main" TV, that I bought them for Christmas like 10 years ago. Zero burn in.
My guess is the store display runs the standard LG Demo. I am thinking LG had fine tuned their software and timings as they are controlling what they display. They must be shipping so many of these TVs purely for demo to so many retail stores and want them to keep their TVs on for the customers to see the image quality. . Most likely all the pictures displayed were optimized in Demo mode (my theory) to cause any kind of burn in. Lets assume there were any obvious symptoms of burn in by leaving the TV on for 1000 hrs or more, it spoils LG reputation, and stores would be the first ones to send it back to manufacturer, on any of these burnt displays to avoid their customers from complaining or triggering any warranty. Summary - perfectly ok to buy these TVs if u dont see any obvious burn in.
Oled burn in is 100% user error.
Don't leave the same content on the screen for days at 100% peak brightness. It was the same thing with CRT "tube" tv's, if you're old enough to remember those. Those are what "screen savers" were invented for.
Google Rtings burn in test. There are several others as well. Just watch varied content and you'll be fine. I have an OLD 55" B6 and a OLD 65" B8 zero burn in. I don't play video games and I watch "varied" content.
I had plasma tv's before the oled's. Zero burn in on them, but you'll read lots of fear mongering "burn in" posts about them from 10 years ago if you google it. My parents are still watching their 51" Samsung plasma TV daily as their "main" TV, that I bought them for Christmas like 10 years ago. Zero burn in.
That said, I wouldn't worry about it. The pixel shifter helps out tremendously.
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I was browsing through the comments to see if there was any mention of Dallas.
This bums me out.