• Forget Samsung's new modular OLED panels if this tech works on T

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Monday, March 31, 2025 14:00:08
    Forget Samsung's new modular OLED panels if this tech works on TVs we could get giant OLED TVs at half the price

    Date:
    Mon, 31 Mar 2025 12:46:36 +0000

    Description:
    Does this modular tech quietly fix the biggest problem in making huge OLED TVs? Only if it can overcome its own biggest flaw

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Samsung Display unveils modular OLED wall-mounted screen The key tech change is 60% reduction in bezels on OLED displays It's very similar to Samsung's The Wall micro-LED product, but OLED

    Samsung Display has unveiled a new modular OLED screen concept, in which a screen of a particular size or shape can be built using a series of smaller OLED displays tiled together (via Tom's Guide ).

    If the idea sounds familiar, that's because it's a very similar idea to Samsung's The Wall micro-LED screen but this is the first time we've seen
    the idea applied to OLED.

    The key tech change that's made this possible is that Samsung says it can reduce the bezel space needed on OLED and QD-OLED panels by 40%, bringing
    them down to 0.6mm. Now, each panel has that bezel, so actually there's a 1.2mm border between the screens, which will be enough of a black line to be noticeable, which is probably part of why this remains a concept for now.

    But let's assume that Samsung can keep improving the tech and can make the bezel even smaller, in which case I think that makes this tech extremely interesting for creating giant projector-matching OLED TV screens. But I'm
    not necessarily interested in the square modular concept shown above the
    same tech could be applied in other, similar ways.

    I immediately started thinking about how the prices of the best OLED TVs rise exponentially as the sets get larger, because of particular quirks of OLED production, and how combining smaller screens could make them much more cost effective. It's a 97-inch OLED! And it's real expensive. (Image credit: LG) Four 55-inch TVs in a trenchcoat

    To illustrate what I mean, I'm going to use LG's OLED TVs rather than Samsung's, because of the sizes involved. The LG G5 (the company's flagship) range includes a 97-inch model, and it costs $24,999 / 24,999.

    That's literally 10 times the price of the 55-inch LG G5 model, which costs $2,499 / 2,399. And the 97-inch model actually has an inferior panel it's a couple of generations behind, and will be nowhere near as bright as the 55-inch model's Primary RGB Tandem four-stack panel .

    The reason for this is that it's incredibly hard to make large-scale OLED TV panels in a cost-effective way. OLED screens are produced on huge sheets called 'mother glass' that are then cut down to smaller sizes; so you can produce nearly four times as many 55-inch screens per mother-glass sheet as you can 97-inch screens.

    But also, OLED production still has yield problems, meaning that a lot of screens are produced imperfectly, and this wastage is factored in to the cost of the displays. If you're producing a lot of panels per mother glass (if you're making phone screens for example), then the wastage doesn't matter too much losing a panel only wastes a tiny amount of your material and time.

    But if you're making 97-inch panels and there's a problem, you've lost a huge amount of material and time, and those costs are factored into the pricing of the good panels, effectively.

    So the modular concept is immediately interesting because it solves that issue: combine smaller screens into one larger display and reduce the wastage problem massively. Could Samsung combine multiple Samsung S95F QD-OLED TVs, like the one here, into (Image credit: Future)

    So what I'm thinking is this: if the bezels can be reduced further, could we have a 110-inch OLED TV in the future that's actually four 55-inch TVs combined in one unit? That's even larger than the 97-inch model, and yet
    could cost a (relatively) mere $10,000, based on the cost of four 55-inch LG G5 TVs.

    And I've used LG as my example because of the easy size comparison to
    existing TVs, but this new tech is coming from Samsung to potentially use in its QD-OLED TVs and that's even better, because these panels don't go any larger than 77 inches currently, so doing this would enable it to offer a giant OLED for the first time.

    It's not as simple as all that, of course. Combining four 4K OLED panels
    means we're talking about an 8K TV, though Samsung has plenty of experience with 8K processing.

    And additionally, a lot of purists i.e., the people most likely to want this TV would reject any sign of a seam between the panels, so unless the bezels can be totally removed I'm probably talking about something of a pipe dream.

    But it wouldn't be the first time that a secret dual-screen setup has been used to make cutting-edge tech more realistically priced the first 5K
    display on an Apple iMac was literally two 1280 x 1440 displays powered by a custom display processor to treat them as one unit, with no seam down the middle.

    Obviously, building a TV out of small squares also solves the screen size problem, but there's a simplicity to fixing four 4K TVs together that solves problems such as dealing with a non-standard resolution.

    I don't think we're going to see a 110-inch OLED built in this way competing with the best TVs any time soon but if this bezel-reducing tech keeps improving, it could make possible the home theater screen of your dreams, especially with micro-LED not looking like it'll become affordable in the
    near future . You might also like 3 discs to add to your 4K Blu-ray
    collection in March 2025 5 things I learned when I tested the LG C5 OLED TV, from embracing AI to troublesome reflections Hisense announces 2025 mini-LED TV lineup, with screen sizes up to 100 inches and a surprising smart TV switch



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/televisions/forget-samsungs-new-modular-oled-panels- if-this-tech-works-on-tvs-we-could-get-giant-oled-tvs-at-half-the-price


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