I'm sure it's subtle, you'd probably have to have a G4 and C4 right next to each other to notice. And again, it wouldn't actually raise the black levels of the panel, just reflect slightly more ambient light in brighter room settings, giving the appearance of it in comparison; it's all relative.
Luck of the draw with these where tinting and near-black uniformity are concerned, for sure, but they all have some level of it. lt just depends on what level you can personally find "acceptable."speancer wrote: ↑26 Jul 2024, 04:58Since I hated the last unit of the G4 I had due to excessively visible green tint like I showed you on the picture, I rolled a dice once more and finally scored. The current unit has acceptable level of tinting, it's on a warmer side, much less distracting. This one's a keeper.
I've seen people "claim" they have, but they had gone through so many panels at that point, hard to tell if they really did find a keeper, or they were just too tired to nitpick any further and/or didn't want to risk getting banned from their outlet of choice for exchanging so many.speancer wrote: ↑03 Aug 2024, 06:11Well, after my experiences with numerous units of high-end WOLED TVs, these words of yours are true indeed!![]()
Anyway, since you read the AVS forums, did you ever see anyone claiming that they actually won the panel lottery? How many units were they willing to go through? I am already exhausted with the exchanges and happy with my new unit!
I've also seen where some try until they give up, quit and buy another TV entirely, it just depends.
Some people certainly "luck out" and get a unit of the same model that happens to be very clean, but I doubt the margin of difference between the units of these same models (discounting outright faulty units) exceeds 10-15% variance in defects, be it uniformity, etc.
