09-27-2020 12:49 AM
09-30-2020 10:53 AM
Thunder DemonWrong, it's a common misconection. It's not the high refreshrate that does the black crush, it's the brightness. Very well lit OLED screens are much much harder to calibrate than dimmer ones. Typically high refreshrate OLED's come with very high brightness levels, that's why we never heard of black crush before even tho we had OLEDs for a while now.https://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/120505#Comment_120505
True
I have seen black crush and burn complains in premium OLEDs too 😂
On phones sadly all high hz phones have it as of now (beyond 90hz it's more pronounced)
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09-30-2020 10:58 AM
ganeshgannu007Um 144hz does have its advantageshttps://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/118938#Comment_118938
Is going for 144hz or anything above 60hz is wrong decision if so why are these displays superior.
I want to tell you that all other colours reproduction is of great quality but, blacks are too bad. That is a serious issue coz we enjoy an Amoled for its blacks.
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09-30-2020 11:01 AM
nightmaster552Wow I didn't know thathttps://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/120508#Comment_120508
Wrong, it's a common misconection. It's not the high refreshrate that does the black crush, it's the brightness. Very well lit OLED screens are much much harder to calibrate than dimmer ones. Typically high refreshrate OLED's come with very high brightness levels, that's why we never heard of black crush before even tho we had OLEDs for a while now.
That's why you see 60hz OLED phones with black crush such as S9, Pixel 2 and so on. The brighter the screen is able to get the stronger the black crush will become if you don't calibrate it on each brightness level.
I will make a video on this explaining why black crush happens, why people need to chill, how to mitigate the problem for yourself and for the future what to look for as there are some devices that CAN have a hardware fault.
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10-14-2020 06:05 AM