I really need help with an issue I'm facing with my new Samsung 64E7000. I'm cross-posting this from the e7000/e8000 thread (I hope that's ok).
I'm getting anywhere from 50-150 bright pale-copper colored pixels, near the center of the screen, in an area about 25 inches in diameter. These pixels intermittently and inconsistently light-up very bright pale-copper color. The pixels will either stay on or flash, and they will remain like that even when the content is paused. Oddly, they only appear when there is a flesh tone showing on the screen. I tried flashing some solid color blocks behind the trouble areas, but I can never create the issue with a still image. I think it has to be flesh tone and video. The pixels are most noticeable when cell light is at 20. It begins to fade and disappear at 17. They pixels are so bright I can see them from 10 feet.
What in the world is this? It looks like stuck pixels, but they're not stuck. Do I have a faulty panel? Should I immediately return/exchange this TV?
This is the best I could do with my phone camera. The pixels are much brighter than is represented by the video below. (BTW, that's a chin and a shoulder.)
I'm getting anywhere from 50-150 bright pale-copper colored pixels, near the center of the screen, in an area about 25 inches in diameter. These pixels intermittently and inconsistently light-up very bright pale-copper color. The pixels will either stay on or flash, and they will remain like that even when the content is paused. Oddly, they only appear when there is a flesh tone showing on the screen. I tried flashing some solid color blocks behind the trouble areas, but I can never create the issue with a still image. I think it has to be flesh tone and video. The pixels are most noticeable when cell light is at 20. It begins to fade and disappear at 17. They pixels are so bright I can see them from 10 feet.
What in the world is this? It looks like stuck pixels, but they're not stuck. Do I have a faulty panel? Should I immediately return/exchange this TV?
This is the best I could do with my phone camera. The pixels are much brighter than is represented by the video below. (BTW, that's a chin and a shoulder.)








