Samsung's new durable OLED screen passes the test of being hammered
Recently, Samsung has announced a "unbreakable" smartphone screen that surprised the tech community. Soon after, this famous phone company continued to shock when sharing the video of the durability test with the hammer of the new durable OLED display.
- Samsung developed an unbreakable phone screen
In the video, the screen panel, despite being hit hard several times with rubber hammer, is still unharmed.
Samsung Display's new durable OLED display is made from an embedded substrate in a reinforced plastic frame that enables it to flex flexibly and cannot break if impacted by normal forces.
Previously, Samsung's screen passed the American durability test with 26 consecutive drops at a height of 1.2 meters and many times at a height of 1.8 meters, withstanding very high temperatures (71 Celsius) and very low (-32 degrees Celsius) without scratches or damage, including edges.
With that capability, Samsung products are expected to be used not only for mobile phones but also for cars, mobile military equipment or handheld game consoles.
See more:
- Stun with Vivo NEX S camera's durability test by dancers
- iPhone and Android smartphone series stick with serious Bluetooth security error
- Play Fortnite on an 80-inch IMAX screen, a completely new peak experience
You should read it
- What is evo OLED panel? What's different from OLED?
- What is QD-OLED? Why is QD-OLED better than OLED or LCD TV?
- Done, Samsung and LG will be the makers of OLED displays for the iPhone
- iPhone X is the best-screen smartphone, thanks to Samsung
- LG Display presents 65-inch scrollable OLED TV like paper
- The display panel on the Galaxy S20 Ultra is the 'best ever made' panel, this is why
- LG opened the giant TV race at CES 2018 with an 8K 8-inch OLED display
- Samsung will have laptops with OLED displays by the end of 2010
- Samsung Galaxy S21 will likely use the Chinese manufacturer's OLED panel, no longer 120Hz
- What is MicroLED? What is MicroLED different from OLED?
- LG does not meet Apple's requirements for OLED iPhone screens
- Instead of OLED or Micro-LED, why did Apple choose a Mini-LED for the new iPad Pro and MacBook Pro displays?
Maybe you are interested
Leaked images of Lenovo's first roll-up screen laptop
How to use split screen on Mac with Split View
8 Android Apps to Write Notes Directly on the Home Screen
How to share screen video with ChatGPT Voice
How to Take a Screenshot on Android When the App Doesn't Allow It
How to record computer screen video with sound