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I had the CX 48" mounted on a floor stand just behind my 77 cm deep desk. The bottom edge was basically at the level of the table.
The only issue with this was that you couldn't really put anything on the desk in front of it.
https://www.monoprice.com/product?p_id=30361
Monoprice Commercial Series Premium Adjustable RollingTilt TV Wall Mount Bracket Stand Cart with Media Shelf, For TVs 37in to 70in, Max Weight 110lbs, Rotating, Height Adjustable w/ VESA up to 600x400
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I no longer use that setup but when I did, it worked just fine. I should have clarified that putting stuff on the desk in the space between the TV and and my kb/mouse was a no go as it would then be impossible to see e.g taskbar etc.If you want the perfect height for a 48" ideally it would go a few inches lower than the keyboard and mouse. So you would need the mouse/keyboard surface to be shallow enough it doesn't obscure your view.
I no longer use that setup but when I did, it worked just fine. I should have clarified that putting stuff on the desk in the space between the TV and and my kb/mouse was a no go as it would then be impossible to see e.g taskbar etc.
I'm now using a 16" MBP + 28" 4K 144 Hz LCD, until that Samsung 57" superultrawide behemoth releases at least. LG CX 48" is in the living room as TV, until something truly better gets released in the 48-55" size.
I no longer use that setup but when I did, it worked just fine. I should have clarified that putting stuff on the desk in the space between the TV and and my kb/mouse was a no go as it would then be impossible to see e.g taskbar etc.
I'm now using a 16" MBP + 28" 4K 144 Hz LCD, until that Samsung 57" superultrawide behemoth releases at least. LG CX 48" is in the living room as TV, until something truly better gets released in the 48-55" size.
Nah, I feel they still have a ways to go until they are so much better that I'm willing to spend that kind of money to upgrade. Might wait a few more years at this rate.There is something truly better for TV use. The QD-OLEDs.
Nah, I feel they still have a ways to go until they are so much better that I'm willing to spend that kind of money to upgrade. Might wait a few more years at this rate.
What puts me off is the small burn in buffer.So what else are you waiting on? The triangle RGB structure isn't a problem if you don't intend to use it as a monitor and in terms of brightness and colors it already gives the CX a big thrashing as it is. Samsung's firmware is still pretty spotty but they have gotten better recently. There's also the Sony alternative.
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The QD-OLEDs also burn in much more quickly.
I honestly just don't have any good reason to upgrade. The CX 48" is fine as is and as long as it keeps working, I have no trouble waiting. If you look at the figures you posted, there's still plenty of room for improvement in those larger window sizes.So what else are you waiting on? The triangle RGB structure isn't a problem if you don't intend to use it as a monitor and in terms of brightness and colors it already gives the CX a big thrashing as it is. Samsung's firmware is still pretty spotty but they have gotten better recently. There's also the Sony alternative.
People use the built in apps?I honestly just don't have any good reason to upgrade. The CX 48" is fine as is and as long as it keeps working, I have no trouble waiting. If you look at the figures you posted, there's still plenty of room for improvement in those larger window sizes.
Samsung's smart TV software is in my experience also way worse than LG WebOS.
I use them all the time for streaming video services. I don't really care to have some separate box for this and some services can be picky what they output on a computer for example.People use the built in apps?
If I set up the voice stuff, will it turn on the Xbox through cec?Short story:
A few days ago I finally went back and got my LG thinq to work with my living room C1 OLED tv.
My google assistant didn't have reliable recognition when I called it "OLED seventy seven" or "LG OLED" . It was reliable once I changed the device name to "Main TV" though.
Now I can change picture modes using my voice assistant, change hdmi inputs, or turn the tv on or off.
I can't seem to get it to recognize APS mode or ISF mode commands but the other screen modes all work. I also couldn't figure out a way to get it to do the "turn off the screen" (emitters) trick, so I ended up sacrificing sports mode. I changed sports mode's brightness, oled brightness to zero so it's a black screen. Now any time I am going away from the screen for a bit (or if want to listen to music source with a static background), I just tell my assistant <assistant name> "Change main tv to sports mode". Then when I come back I'll tell it to change back to a different mode - game mode, standard mode, cinema mode, vivid mode, filmmaker mode, which all work. When I switch to sports mode it turns off the emitters essentially while leaving the tv running so works good for my purpose. I haven't tried using voice commands to change HDR modes while watching HDR material yet.
There are three standard modes, specifically both isf modes and APS mode that I can't get the voice comfmands to work with. I haven't been able to get it to change brightness or other settings alone as a command generically on whatever mode either. It swaps between hdmi inputs nicely though, and can even launch some of the LG webOS apps (e.g. Youtube), and then I can switch back to my nvidia shield's hdmi input by voice when I'm done. The only reason I ever use the TV's webOS is if I find some HDR content I want to watch like some HDR gameplay or something which is pretty rare (the shield doesn't have the chip youtube uses for HDR unfortunately but shield 2019 has full HDR and dolby vision, hdmi earc sound etc for everything else).
I looked around for a list of voice commands that work with the tv but didn't have much luck, just some older articles.
Pretty cool functionality imo. Much less messing with remotes now. To be clear I'm talking about using the standalone assistant hardware/mini rather than keying the mic on the LG remote (or my shield 2019 remote).
If I set up the voice stuff, will it turn on the Xbox through cec?
That only happens if you abuses it the way RTings did. Many AW3423DW-S95B owners have been using them as desktop monitor ever since released without hiding taskbar or turning on dark mode and those panels still function 100% like when they first turned them on.The QD-OLEDs also burn in much more quickly.
Still less endurance than the LG ones, apples to apples.That only happens if you abuses it the way RTings did. Many AW3423DWF-S95B owners have been using them as desktop monitor ever since released without hiding taskbar or turning on dark mode and those panels still function 100% like when they first turned them on.
10-years gap between both panel technologies and the LG's barely did better.Still less endurance than the LG ones, apples to apples.
Monitors Unboxed started to get burn in on an Alienware from a browser after a few hundred hours of mixed usage.That only happens if you abuses it the way RTings did. Many AW3423DW-S95B owners have been using them as desktop monitor ever since released without hiding taskbar or turning on dark mode and those panels still function 100% like when they first turned them on.
I honestly just don't have any good reason to upgrade. The CX 48" is fine as is and as long as it keeps working, I have no trouble waiting. If you look at the figures you posted, there's still plenty of room for improvement in those larger window sizes.
Samsung's smart TV software is in my experience also way worse than LG WebOS.
The 2023 models should be better at that since they now use Deuterium while WOLED has been using it for a while now. But yeah I guess even with that, it would still be behind LG when it comes to longevity.
LG's EX tech uses AI learning to figure out the emitter wear in advance which allows LG to remove some wear sensing electronics in their displays. That results in more output per pixel per given energy delivered so is more efficient. That means lower electricity used per pixel = longer OLED lifespan -or- higher light output.
Deuterium OLEDs are also more efficient.
Phosphorescent blue (and green) oleds in 2024 - 2025 will be much more efficient too = longer lifespan -or- brighter output
Micro Lens Array will also increase efficiency or light output.
It might be up to the mfg whether they use these technologies to boost the light output or to lengthen the screen's lifespan but it would be nice if the users had the option themselves in the OSD. They'd likely use it to boost the brightness anyway since that is more impactful marketing wise.
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Hydro or Magnetic bearing Fans
Thick Heatsink
Electronics
Pho-Blue
Pho-Green
QD-Layer
Micro Lens Array.
OLED.EX technology isn’t the first use of deuteration in LG televisions, Herron says. The electronics maker has dabbled in it before, but OLED.EX is LG’s biggest use of deuterated compounds thus far, and it is the first time the firm has disclosed the compounds’ application.
The use of deuterated compounds isn’t yet widespread in the display industry. “Currently, LG is the only one,” says Jimmy Kim, a senior principal analyst for OLED materials at the technology consulting firm Omdia. Kim notes that DuPont and LG have filed most of the patents for deuterated OLED compounds.
Other groups, however, have investigated deuterium for OLEDs. For example, in 2014, scientists from the University of Tokyo deuterated benzylic methyl groups in a green phosphorescent material. The scientists noted a fivefold increase in material lifetime, while all other properties remained unchanged. The group was also able to achieve higher luminescence from the deuterated compound because it degraded more slowly.
Display firms are pursuing other strategies for maximizing device lifetime, Kim says. For instance, they use tandem structures in which OLED stacks are placed on top of one another, minimizing current density while achieving high light output and long lifetime. Manufacturers have also rolled out materials based on longer-lasting boron dopants, he says.
Universal Display, a key supplier of materials to the OLED display industry, recently revealed it has cracked a 20-year puzzle on the difficulty of manufacturing blue phosphorescent material at scale. The company said last November that it was on track to commercialize phosphorescent blue emitters by the end of 2024, with the technology possibly appearing in TVs the year after. Now, it says both LG Display and Samsung Display are looking more closely at its recent innovation.
"We plan to mass-produce them from 2024," Mike Hack, vice president of Universal Display , told Korean website ETNews. "Changing the blue OLED from fluorescence to phosphorescence can increase the luminous efficiency by 4 times."
Today’s OLED TVs rely on two kinds of emitting materials, including phosphorescent for red and green light, and fluorescent to create blue light. However, the fluorescent material is known to be very inefficient, and only 25% of the power put into it ends up as light.
So Universal Display has been working towards using a combination of red, green and blue phosphorescent, as doing so would enable it to deliver 100% efficiency for OLED panels. However, it had struggled to refine the blue phosphorescent technology, until recently. Universal Display hopes to begin supplying customers including LG Display and Samsung Display with its blue “PHOLED” materials by early 2024
Will the TV turn on by voice command?Not sure how the xbox works. Will the xbox turn on/wake up from standby when you switch to it's hdmi input normally? If so, you can switch between inputs and sources on the tv by voice commands just fine so any thing that activates when you switch to it's input should work the same as if you switched to that input with the remote control.
I would not recommend rotating a 42" OLED often, or moving it at all really.I’m picking up an on sale Best Buy C2 42” today. What’s the current consensus on best monitor arm?
1. Ergotron LX / Amazon Basics
2. Ergotron HX (non-HD)
3. Fully Jarvis / Monoprice
I had planned to get an Ergotron HX but am reading that it’s very stiff to adjust. I move my monitor back and forth, and rotate landscape/portrait quite often.
Easy adjustability is key for me.
Would you mind sharing why? I’ll have a handle attached to the VESA mount, so I won’t torque the screen directly.I would not recommend rotating a 42" OLED often, or moving it at all really.
A floor stand could be as simple as this one pictured below but I have a different one from monoprice that rotates to portrait and has a hand crank for easy height adjustment. The style in this first picture is usually pretty affordable at $65 - $150 depending on the model. Some are more robust than others, some don't have portrait spin capability, as much tilt, etc so there are some variables between different stands.
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floor stand models from monoprice. They are in high demand so often out of stock. They sometimes go on sale for $150 - $160.
Monoprice stand midline of VESA bracket max height = ~ 62 inch (5' 2"), midline of vesa bracket min height = ~ 46.25 inch (1.75 inch short of 4'). Thats to the middle of the TV/screen obviously.
You don't need to install the top extension periscope looking camera arm/shelf thing or any of the shelves, they are easily omitted. You could probably omit the wheels too if you didn't ever want to roll it but it would shorten it slightly.
37" to 70in TVs, max 110 lbs. Vesa up to 600x400, min vesa 200x200 but you can get an adapter plate to anything. LG 42 c2 and 48cx are both 300x200.
https://www.monoprice.com/product?p_id=30361
Monoprice Commercial Series Premium Adjustable RollingTilt TV Wall Mount Bracket Stand Cart with Media Shelf, For TVs 37in to 70in, Max Weight 110lbs, Rotating, Height Adjustable w/ VESA up to 600x400
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The monitor arm you'd need to rotate a 42" OLED... I don't think even the Ergotron HX series would do it. I tried using the ASUS 42" OLED and it was comically large. My desk just isn't deep enough to get the distance I'd need to read it comfortably, let alone for games.I would not recommend rotating a 42" OLED often, or moving it at all really.
SAME, I loved the LVM-37W3 and kept it way longer than I should have. The 42C2 is just all that and more of everything.The best monitor purchase of my last 30 thirty years was the Westinghouse LVM-37W3. In a couple of different roles it gave me over a decade of outstanding service. I can't help but be reminded of it by the C2 42" so far. Similar size, excellent performance, but you have to know a little bit about how to set everything up right.
I'm starting to see the light on this OLED craze.
I ended up going with the Mountup "up to 33lbs" arm, similar in design to the Jarvis, and got it installed today. It moves in all the positions I want it to. I'll give it a week of testing before I declare it a success.
A nice touch of the Mountup is that the gas tension screw has a readout for attached weight. So I dialed it to 22lbs (I have a VESA shelf with camera bolted to the monitor) and it was correct right out the gate. Neat!
loopaddiction my build worked out millimeter perfect. Let me explain it and I’ll add the downside on the bottom. I can recommend this setup to anyone skilled enough to know about this forum.
1. Mountup “up to 33 lbs” monitor arm. $60.
2. Vivo adapter plate. $20.
3. Mount Plus VESA shelf. $25.
Sandwich the adapter plate between the VESA shelf mount and monitor arm plate. Have the shelf mount be in the maximum height position. Use the flathead screws and nuts supplied with the adapter plate. This gives a very tight fit between the three parts.
Next we will mount the VESA shelf to its mount in what it’s manual describes as the “forward” position, but we will need to use spacers so that the front of the shelf lines up right with the screen. Use both the large black spacers from the monitor arm and the small black spacers from the VESA shelf. Use the M5x25 screws from the monitor arm which will fit and be exactly the right length.
Finally mount the adapter plate using its provided spacers and bolts to the TV. Set the monitor arm to 22 lbs. When attaching the monitor arm to the desk, have the inside edge of the clamp/grommet be 9 inches from the centerline. The monitor is big and this will allow maximum extension to the rear of the desk.
View attachment 576333
Downside: this monitor arm is in the style of the Fully Jarvis, but a heavier build version. My wife uses the Fully Jarvis. It is nicer and smooth out of the box. With the cheaper Mountup, there are tension screws on the swivels between the arm segments and the arm and the clamp. You will have to dial in the tension just right so the arm moves smoothly and both swivels trigger at the same time.
The LG is not that heavy and the Ergotron with the correct adapter plate will work fine.
How's the monitor arm working for you? I'm also on the same boat...I've researched endlessly and everybody seems to be using either the Ergotron LX or HX for the 42" C2. I'm reading now that the LX actually works better than the HX for this size and weight.
Right now I'm aiming for the LX with the Vivo VESA adapter. I don't need features like tilt/swivel/rotate, but I do need to be able to pull it closer and push it back. I also can't do floor or wall-mounts with my setup. My only concern is I use a standing desk and in standing mode, the desk has a little wobble to it. I heard the LX with this monitor can be a little wobbly on it's own, so I'm thinking this combination might not be ideal.