A burn comes from having a picture on the screen what has little movement. Don't leave the screen on a channel or video that is static for days at a time.
Plasma televisions suffer from an effect known as plasma burn. It can happen if a static image is displayed for extended periods of time. The phosphors in the screen are slightly damaged over a period of time and the result is that the image is burnt onto the phospor permanently. It has been known to happen within a few days if, for example, a logo is left permanently displayed for several hours each day. Therefore, any games console that has fixed images on the screen may cause the problem, especially if the same game is being displayed continually. It is worth reading the user manual for the television carefully and following the advice. Normally, this effect is not covered by warranties. Avoid leaving static images on the screen. Avoid having high contrast or high color static images and don't set the brightness adjustments too high. As long as you are sensible with the use of games on a plasma, there shouln't be too many problems.
There are no 15-inch plasma screens on the market. The plasma screen market is now limited to very large scale screens (50" +).
it was made in 1990
There is no certain way to tell if is plasma just by looking at it. A flourescent backlit LCD TV looks just like a Plasma TV. You can Google the model of the TV or look at the manual.
Panasonic 152 inch 2160p 3D plasma.
the first plasma screen television was made in 2000
Image burn is a feature of plasma televisions but it is almost impossible to see it after just one month. Don't keep static images on a plasma screen for long periods of time and this problem will never appear.
Plasma, plasma can have the "burn in screen" but so can lcd, lcd is actually more likely to burn in that a plasma, now the whole picture wont burn in but each individual pixel will, For Plasma TVs, the advantages over LCD, are: Better contrast ratio, better ability to render deep blacks, more color depth, better motion tracking (response time), and more availability in very large screen sizes.
This subject has alot of debate but research of owners opinions shows that LCD screens are getting better reviews. Plasma's are still very vulnerable to damage if bumped and burn in on the screen.
It is safe to play in that you will not be hurt. There is a concern about picture burn in on some plasma TV screens and it is not restricted to whether it is a PS2 being played or from other situations
Plasma TV's are one of the best type of TV's out there, but I guess that can be a matter of opinion. The advantages of a plasma TV versus an LCD or LED is that their aren't any liquids that will dry up or light bulbs that will burn out. The only caution you must keep in mind is that you cannot leave a plasma TV on a still screen for long periods of time.
There is no difference the only thing is plasma is in a TV in plasma screen TV and plasma is outside of the TV in the state or matter.
Most TV stands are suitable for plasma TVs of any size, and therefore the screen size is not important. Of course, if the screen is very heavy, then a solid stand is needed.
Plasma televisions suffer from an effect known as plasma burn. It can happen if a static image is displayed for extended periods of time. The phosphors in the screen are slightly damaged over a period of time and the result is that the image is burnt onto the phospor permanently. It has been known to happen within a few days if, for example, a logo is left permanently displayed for several hours each day. Therefore, any games console that has fixed images on the screen may cause the problem, especially if the same game is being displayed continually. It is worth reading the user manual for the television carefully and following the advice. Normally, this effect is not covered by warranties. Avoid leaving static images on the screen. Avoid having high contrast or high color static images and don't set the brightness adjustments too high. As long as you are sensible with the use of games on a plasma, there shouln't be too many problems.
Plazma...плазма example: plasma screen of a TV
It is neon and xenon with electricity applied to it when it's on.
in televisions and videos