Screen Burn-In Examples
Screen burn-in tool will show you if your screen is affected, but there is no way for any testing tool to judge the results. Because screen burn in happens in the matrix of the screen. Which means, that computer can only assume that the image on your screen is correct. It cannot check if that’s true and it unfortunately cannot adjust to display more uniform color.
Therefore, it is very useful to understand what you’re looking for when performing the burn-in test.
We present you, wide collection of images depicting different levels of burn-in amongst different screens and displays, so you can have better insight when testing your own screens.
We do hope that you find this gallery helpful.
Red screen burn-in examples:
This collection showcases different pictures capturing displays having difficulties in showing a uniform red color across the entire screen area. Which is a common sign on screen burn-in.
Green screen burn-in examples:
Conspicuous greenness usually shows up on a solid yellow screen when performing burn-in test. While the solid green color often develops darker regions of burn-in.
Blue screen burn-in examples:
Take a good look at this magenta screen. It is not a gradient! The color should be uniform, but it has a very visible protrusion of blue color in the middle of the screen. Similarly to a solid green screen – a solid blue one has developed darker regions which a very common screen burn-in pattern for some lower-end display panels.
What’s next?
If you noticed any of those issues on your screen, you can take steps to test your display panel to see if it could be affected by a “screen burn-in” condition. Feel free to pick any of those quick and free tests to perform here online, bookmark this site for future reference and re-run any test any time you need.