Should I buy a QLED, OLED or LED TV?
When shopping for a TV, you'll see QLED, OLED, and LED options. They all seem to look the same when you see them on screen, so which TV should you buy and what are the differences between them?
Is LED, QLED or OLED the best TV for you?
Each TV has its own pros and cons, which we will discuss in detail later. But here are the best TVs based on different criteria:
- LED TVs are a great choice if you're on a budget or prioritize screen size over picture quality and color accuracy.
- QLED TVs deliver better colors than LED TVs and are perfect for rooms with a lot of light (like living rooms or bedrooms with lots of windows) because they can deliver higher brightness than OLED TVs. However, they are more expensive than LED TVs.
- OLED TVs are the gold standard for color accuracy and contrast, but this comes at the cost of lower brightness and burn-in. This option is great if you have a dedicated cinema or TV room, or if you place your TV in a room where you can control the amount of light it receives.
These are the main strengths of each TV technology. So let's find out how each type of TV is different.
How do different TV technologies affect your viewing experience?
Some people may think that OLED or QLED TVs are better than LED TVs, but the truth is that there is no superior TV. It's best to consider the specific characteristics of each type and then compare.
Brightness
Unless you place your TV in a completely dark room, brightness will play an important role in your viewing experience. You need your TV screen to be bright enough to see it clearly against ambient light, especially if you install the TV in a living room or bedroom with lots of windows.
This is the highlight of QLED TV. Its quantum dot layer gives QLED TVs exceptional brightness, even compared to more basic LED TVs. Furthermore, they are more energy efficient so you don't have to spend as much electricity to get a bright screen.
Brightness is generally the weakest point of OLED TVs. Because each sub-pixel produces its own light, TV manufacturers can't make them too bright or risk creating burn-in, limiting the screen's lifespan.
Contrast
OLED TVs excel in contrast because of the way they work. Unlike LED and QLED TVs, which always have a backlight, each individual pixel on an OLED TV will only light up when required. This means OLED TVs have infinite contrast ratios - delivering the deepest blacks and richest colors.
One way to see this clearly is to move a small white object in front of a black image, like hovering a white mouse cursor over a dark screen background. Most LED and QLED TVs will show some fading, i.e. the black background around the white cursor appears a bit lighter.
However, this is not a problem with OLED TVs. No matter how bright or white that small object is, the pixels around it will still appear black due to the way OLED screens work.
Color accuracy
OLED TVs have traditionally had an advantage over other TV technologies because of the way they work. However, QLED TVs are quickly catching up, especially since Samsung introduced NeoQLED TVs, which combine MiniLED technology with a Quantum Dot display.
However, if you're looking for the best color accuracy, you should currently go with an OLED TV. But if you're hesitant to use this technology because you have a bright and airy living room, you should consider QD-OLED TVs, which add a quantum dot layer to the OLED screen.
Burn-in phenomenon
Despite its age and advances in OLED technology, it still suffers from burn-in, especially with long-term use. So if you want to tune in or play games for a few hours a day, you might want to stay away from OLED TVs.
You're better off using a QLED or LED TV because these technologies don't have the problem of screen burn-in. But if you already have an OLED TV, you probably already know what causes burn-in on OLED screens as well as how to fix and prevent it.
Price
This is often the most important consideration when buying a TV. So if you're on a tight budget and want the biggest screen for your money, you should stick with LED TVs. That's because it's the oldest technology out of the three; Therefore, its price is the most affordable.
But let's say you're building a home theater and want to avoid costly mistakes. In that case, you should consider buying the more expensive QLED or OLED models, especially if you want a better viewing experience.
Summing up, you will see that both QLED and OLED TVs receive two points, while LED TVs only have the upper hand in terms of price. This shows that no TV technology is superior overall - finding the best technology depends on the TV's application or location.
How LED, QLED and OLED TVs work
It's important to understand how each TV technology works to know the details of these differences. While LED and QLED TVs work on the same principle, with QLED adding an extra step to produce a better picture, OLED TVs work completely differently. So these are the concepts behind every TV.
LED TV
LED TVs work on the same principle as the first LCD TVs. It's a flat screen with multiple layers that control lighting and color. The bottom layer is usually the backlight part, which lights up the screen so you can see the image. Instead of using fluorescent or other types of lights, LED TVs use LED lights, hence the term.
Even though LED TVs have multiple layers, here's the basics of how it works. The light source - the LED screen - is located behind the TV. At the front we have a vertical polarizer that only lets vertical light waves pass through it.
After the vertical polarizer, the liquid crystal layer twists the vertically polarized light from 0 to 90 degrees, depending on its source state. From there, we have a horizontal polarizer that only allows horizontal light waves to pass through.
This is how the TV can control which subpixels (the individual red, green, or blue cells within each pixel) receive light. For example, if a TV needs to display a white image, it will rotate the vertical light to a 90-degree angle for all sub-pixels. But if you need an image with 50% grayscale, it will only rotate the light source 45 degrees and only let about half of the maximum intensity light pass through.
For black pictures, the TV will not rotate vertically polarized light, meaning no light will pass through the horizontal polarizer. This will result in a black image on the TV. While there are other key differences between LCD and LED TVs, the core concept of how they create the images you see on screen remains the same.
QLED TV
QLED TVs start with the same principle as LED TVs - backlight, vertical polarization layer, liquid crystal layer, horizontal polarization layer, color layer and viewing screen. However, QLED TVs do not use white LED backlighting. That's because white LED backlights are often not perfectly white. You can see this if you look at the LED strip; you'll notice they're usually yellow in color.
To solve this problem, leading QLED TV manufacturer Samsung uses a Quantum Dot layer as a light source. Instead of using a white LED as a backlight, the company used an LED light source to excite the crystals in the Quantum Dot layer. This layer then emits natural white light that is brighter than traditional LED sources.
This allows the TV to show you more vibrant and accurate colors than regular LED TVs. QLED TVs are so accurate that Samsung even claims their TVs can reproduce billions of colors – essentially every color the human eye can see. Quantum Dot technology is so good that some TV manufacturers are adding it to OLED TVs and calling them QD-OLED.
OLED TV
The main difference between OLED TVs compared to LED and QLED TVs is how they produce light. Instead of requiring a backlight, each pixel on an OLED TV emits its own light.
This is unlike LED or QLED TVs, which require constant power to keep the entire backlight layer on. If part of the screen is black, the liquid crystal layer will block the light emitted from the backlight. While this is enough to reduce the brightness of that particular part, it often results in some light leakage - usually from neighboring pixels - leading to glare on your screen, especially if you view white image on black background.
But on OLED TVs, when part of the screen is black, there is absolutely no light emitted from that part. This is what gives OLED TVs accurate colors and infinite contrast ratios.
Now that you know the differences between the three TV technologies, you can choose the best TV technology to suit your needs. Determine what's most important: Affordability, brightness or color accuracy.
But buying a TV isn't just about screen technology - there are many other factors you need to consider if choosing a TV for your home.
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