If it is a new plasma set, there have been improvements that tend to minimize burn-in (apparently making the ghost image fade with time so burn-in is not permanent). With older sets, I have heard that bright, high-contrast video game images can cause burn-in in an hour. For ordinary television viewing I doubt that you'd see a problem. if yours is a widescreen TV, and you watch a lot of "pillarboxed" (bars left and right) 4:3 images, you should select gray instead of black, or use the stretch mode to fill the screen.
2006-09-14 12:21:49
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answer #1
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answered by gp4rts 7
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the 1st 100 hrs. is where most burn in's can happen after that it can take 5 or 6 hrs.(depending on what brand you have ) before you can see the effects after you have broken in the set but even before that you can see some ghosting effects best thing to do is use your zoom modes ( in panasonic plasma the just mode works the best with no real noticeable distortion ) but even then it can still happen because of sports tickers & annoying broadcast logos. so just don't leave a image on the screen longer than 20mins. that have letterbox bars, logos or sport tickers
2006-09-16 09:33:57
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answer #2
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answered by r.j, 3
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you may desire to concern Plasma TVs. For the 1st one hundred-200 hours of operation you may desire to coach the brightness and assessment (photograph) settings way down. and doubtless carry off the video games for the time of that element. After that element, optimize the settings and play away. this could prepare to the greater powerful manufacturers consisting of Pioneer, Panasonic, Samsung, and so on. I won't vouch for the 2d tier high quality manufacturers however. I even have many buddies that positioned many a hour of Wii, 360, and PS3 by using their plasmas and not in any respect whinge of burn-in themes. present day ones are merely outfitted greater powerful than those from 5 years in the past. And the rather precise end ones even have anti-photograph retention useful factors (which suits above and previous the actuality that Plasma is merely greater powerful now than it replaced into years in the past)..
2016-12-12 08:35:16
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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It could be as short as 6 hours or up to 30 hours, depends on what the image is. The brighter the image is, the hotter the gas bubbles are, and the sooner they will burn out.
2006-09-14 12:10:31
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answer #4
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answered by Seanithon 2
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depends... how many hours has the plasma been used? like not in one spot, but like total???? if its been through over 100 hours of use, manufacturers say it cant be burnt in... if its a newer TV it could be anywhere from 6-50 hours, just depends on the circulation of air in the set itself
2006-09-14 12:15:05
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answer #5
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answered by MstrChief55 5
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