Even this showcase was difficult to get on video as stated in the beginning of the video. Manufactures don’t want to showcase anything that’s not marketing and hype generating. This is after all, their secret sauce via logistics
Just search for it "OLED manufacturing process" and you will only see big machines printing out sheets of OLED paper basically and its glued onto a big master glass cut to size, I believe there is also a documentary about OLED manufacturing filming inside the Samsung factory including one of the AMOLED screens being made for phones. Stop being so lazy
@@SiskoSvK The panel is the most important part, yes the software/hardware needs to utilize its full potential to make it worth it. But the best software/hardware cant make a bad panel look good.
People have been sold on some romantic idea about how tech works. It's really not. The amazon store without a checkout that uses "AI"... turned out to be like 100 indian people looking at video cameras lol
Zero dead / faulty pixel tolerance is something all tv manufacturers need to apply to their premium sets. I'll happily add £50 - £100 to a sticker price for that.
Well, I was quite excited to see the OLED tv but no it was just the assembly of pre made components. All interesting. OLED panel itself is what probably everyone was expecting. One day maybe.
I think I speak for virtually everyone that has ever watched/ will watch this video when I say that I was hoping to see how the actual panel is made. THAT unfortunately is the closely guarded secret.
Not very automated . Looks like a slow and somewhat inefficient assembly line. I can’t imagine Sony and LG assembly lines being like this given the amount of Oleds that they ship.
thought the same but nah i think its their upper class high end tv model assembly line. just like the e9, that tv 100% had a cherry picked panel and parts. its lg's best tv ever made! dont know which model in the video. or maybe they have many companies that assemble the tv's. not sure if thats even a thing tho. ps: nvm, this is loewe assembly line. just like i said, "upper class". i thought its a lg factory...
Interesting! It's not quite as automated a process as I first thought! Thanks for the insight! 😊 As for the brand name, I always wondered how that was pronounced... Easy to remember: "Mr. Loewe Man - Shabba!!" 🤣
This didn't really show how an OLED is made. This showed how an OLED panel is attached to a cabinet with other components. This could as well have been an LCD TV assembly. Was kind of hoping to see the inkjet making of an actual OLED panel with pixels and substrates etc.
Sounds absurd, especially as it's coming from a B&O fan (me), but Loewe seems much more reliable and repairable. Repairability of B&O products is awful, and B&O customer support is utterly bad unfortunately.
Love your videos and extreme efforts to detail.. You helped me purchase my first oled tv which was the lg55c8.. Is the c8 a better set than say the c4? I am guessing the higher the number and letter the more advanced tech?
I always thought that i was the first person actually turning the tv on for the 1st time, as an customer, when i bought a new tv ... i dont know, it made me feel special somehow 😞 I liked the vagueness, the mystery of it all. But now it turns out, your tv has already been watched, touched and even cleaned several times before you even get to press the remote button, at home on your couch.
I hope you're joking 😅. Obviously every product is tested before it leaves the factory, this applies to everything that is manufactured by any company.
Sorry but it was not interesting. Drilling/soldering/testing/packing stuff in cardboard is standard. Too bad we did not see how the panel is made, because it's the only thing that fascinates me.
That's a lot of manual labour that can't be reliably automated. However, picking just the first TV in a batch to check, rather than the first and a random one around the middle it's likely to miss any shortcuts the workers might have started to take in their routine. Quality control should be an ongoing process, not a one-time deal.
@@ms3862 err, the video literally starts from AFTER the screen panel has already been made and put together, most of the video is watching a guy screw on the plastic back panel 🤣
Next time maybe show how the OLED itself is made - not a super-low volume assembly plant boxing budget models by hand. Cutting the mother glass? Nope. Vapor deposition? Nope. TFT layer etching? Nope. Phosphorescent dye manufacture? Nope. Quantum dot manufacture? Nope. Surface coating manufacture? Nope. Literally any engineering involved? Nope. But here's some dudes fumbling with cardboard boxes instead.
Agreed, this is just final assembly, testing and packaging. Most large companies out there now do all of this in Mexico (at least with their TVs destined for the US market)
Their 65" OLED TV costs about 4000€ or about double what you can get a comparable LG for with the exact same panel. It's a luxury brand for German instagram home decorators. They probably sell a couple hundred of these a year.
Pretty decent, the screen are from LG Display. Good quality screens. There are probably a lower level of quality on electric components. That way they can keep the cost down.
LOL Loewe is extremely overpriced. Like they want 10k for a 65 inch. And they don't even seem to have any special interesting tech to get more out of the picture. It is still the same LG OLED panel, you can buy a top of the line from LG for about 3k. You can buy a new one every year for many years for the price of one of those Loewe tv's. To me they always seemed like a brand for people with more money than sense.
I would be interested on how the panel itself is manufactured
They are not showing that. The PRC is watching. You think just anyone can get a job or bring a cell phone into LG Display panel manufacturing.
Even this showcase was difficult to get on video as stated in the beginning of the video. Manufactures don’t want to showcase anything that’s not marketing and hype generating. This is after all, their secret sauce via logistics
It is way more interesting. They use a vacuum chamber
GIVE US THE PANEL
@@MarkBoda there are many videos how TVs are made. There is no difference. Plastic case + electronics board + panel. Quality Control. Package. Done.
So this is basically an assembly facility, i wish one day we would be abel to see how the panel itself is made
Just search for it "OLED manufacturing process" and you will only see big machines printing out sheets of OLED paper basically and its glued onto a big master glass cut to size, I believe there is also a documentary about OLED manufacturing filming inside the Samsung factory including one of the AMOLED screens being made for phones.
Stop being so lazy
The panel is not important. The software/hardware is.
exactly
@@SiskoSvK The panel is the most important part, yes the software/hardware needs to utilize its full potential to make it worth it. But the best software/hardware cant make a bad panel look good.
@@SiskoSvKyou're right who needs a oled panel when you can use a cheap lcd panel? Its all software 😂😂😂
Surprised to see such a manual process. QC checks and keeping spare parts around gets a thumbs up from me.
yeah sure, but LOEWE is REALLY expensive.
The Loewe bild i.65 dr+ TV costs more than double of my 65" Samsung S95B, so it better be good.
People have been sold on some romantic idea about how tech works. It's really not. The amazon store without a checkout that uses "AI"... turned out to be like 100 indian people looking at video cameras lol
this is how a TV is made not specifically OLED, this video is indeed about the cat
Cats are better anyway, although I've had a few that malfunctioned, mostly in the brain region. 😽
@@catbertz Ikr
I will never tire of seeing the back of Vinny's head walking into that telly shop.
Loved Loewe's CRT TVs but surprised they are still around.
think they went out of business a few years ago so were presumably bought out afterwards
Zero dead / faulty pixel tolerance is something all tv manufacturers need to apply to their premium sets. I'll happily add £50 - £100 to a sticker price for that.
I remember Loewe and Grundig TVs through the 90s and very early 2000s they had beautiful smooth displays for old tube TVs. 😊
I had Grundig and Blaupunkt tv's back in the 90's. German tele's were very unreliable.
i wanted to see the cutting of mother-glass
The packing situation is that manual? I figured they'd be banging these out in a giga factory somewhere.
Very cool, thanks Vincent.
Its Loewe, very limited production and sales
@@kudryavchikYep, their cheapest model is apparently 3000 € or about 650 McDonald Big Macs® for us Americans.
OLED the king of Screens and TVs. Perfect black level, infinite contrast ratio and 8 million zones. Best quality
I need that vacuum lifting system for when I hang my next 97" OLED on the wall.
When a papa OLED and mama OLED really love each other they make a baby OLED.
yeah that's a babby qd-oled by samsung 😂😂😂-horreee...
Well, I was quite excited to see the OLED tv but no it was just the assembly of pre made components. All interesting. OLED panel itself is what probably everyone was expecting. One day maybe.
Checking 65 inch panel for dead pixels by eye in 30 seconds is a joke.
So is your life
I guess that’s the by product of low volume manufacturing and not enough capital to support industrial-grade quality control.
Well spotted!
Not the video I wanted! I want to see the LG mother glass and how exactly that thing is cut to size.
Nice to see good working conditions.
nice design, looks high class
this is same as any TV. what would be interestiong is to see how the OLED panel is made
I think I speak for virtually everyone that has ever watched/ will watch this video when I say that I was hoping to see how the actual panel is made. THAT unfortunately is the closely guarded secret.
Interesting! Thanks for sharing this! I'm surprised this was so labor intense.
Clickbait title.
Great coverage and information, thank you.
this is not "How OLED TVs are Made " this is "how OLED TVs are assembled "
Not very automated . Looks like a slow and somewhat inefficient assembly line. I can’t imagine Sony and LG assembly lines being like this given the amount of Oleds that they ship.
Thought the same thing. Seems like a good company to do business with though.
A lot of manufacturing is less automated than we like to believe. People are often cheaper than machines.
The robots are too busy making art.
@@elainebenes7971but not in Germany. This video is a huge pr blow for Loewe 😅
thought the same but nah i think its their upper class high end tv model assembly line. just like the e9, that tv 100% had a cherry picked panel and parts. its lg's best tv ever made! dont know which model in the video. or maybe they have many companies that assemble the tv's. not sure if thats even a thing tho. ps: nvm, this is loewe assembly line. just like i said, "upper class". i thought its a lg factory...
I prefer his voice over the music, Love you Teoh!
I love your videos and all the knowledge you have. I will subscribe now.
Interesting! It's not quite as automated a process as I first thought! Thanks for the insight! 😊
As for the brand name, I always wondered how that was pronounced... Easy to remember: "Mr. Loewe Man - Shabba!!" 🤣
It‘s german and should actually be written Löwe (Lion). Try google translate, pronounces it pretty good.
Thanks for this inside analysis
quite amazed by this assembly process. Even car manufacturing facilities involve nowadays less human interference than this assembly of an OLED tv..
TIL that deadpixel quality check is manually done by human eyes instead of full automation.
This didn't really show how an OLED is made. This showed how an OLED panel is attached to a cabinet with other components.
This could as well have been an LCD TV assembly. Was kind of hoping to see the inkjet making of an actual OLED panel with pixels and substrates etc.
Nothing here was manufactured in this video. This is an assembly factory - this video shows how a TV is assembled, not manufactured
Vincent should rename his channel to "OLEDTVTest"
This is very informative. Thanks for sharing this
i will start saving now probably within 6 years i might be able to buy one These sound like B&O super well built
Sounds absurd, especially as it's coming from a B&O fan (me), but Loewe seems much more reliable and repairable.
Repairability of B&O products is awful, and B&O customer support is utterly bad unfortunately.
Thank you so much for the insight. You are the best Vincent. 👍
*How OLED TVs are Assembled
What about the panel???
these heroes made my oleds 😎😎💎💎
This is very cool! Thank you :D
Love your videos and extreme efforts to detail.. You helped me purchase my first oled tv which was the lg55c8.. Is the c8 a better set than say the c4? I am guessing the higher the number and letter the more advanced tech?
Very good prononciation LEUWE (Loewe)
Fascinating😊
Title says how oled "TVs" are made, not oled "panels", so it is accurate
Great video Vincent! I am thinking about buying a new oled tv. In your opinion is the lg g3 or the sony a95l better?
Interesting thank you Vincent for showing us 👍
How Loewe OLED TVs are made. Not the overwhelming majority of OLED TVs.
That factory looked more like where I'd imagine Greggs products are made. Seems very...casual.
This is not what I was expected from a modern TV factory
Could not be happier with the Samsung S95
Excellent video! Thank you!
Want to see the oled material going on the glass and all the other layers.
That's the real top secret stuff.
I watched how OLEDs are made on my AMOLED display, now I feel superior
Calibrated more... TVs not cats 😂
No does reviews as thoroughly as you bud always a pleasure to watch.
Thank you for your good job
Can you tell me What is your choice between
A80L vs x95L i couldnt decide
I expected a hectic, automated assembly line; if this is how they're all made, we're not anywhere near a price floor
Now I want to see a video on cat calibration!
This is more like a boxing video. No much really shown. Love your other vids though 👍
The footage is unseen. Exactly like the loans of their salesman after they went down a few years ago.
Surprised the wipe down isn’t more of a clean room with staff
Also, not impressed that the same ‘pad’ was used to wipe the screen and then the back - it looks dirty too 😢
Why? You don't need a clean room for packaging. That is only needed when manufacturing the electronics.
I always thought that i was the first person actually turning the tv on for the 1st time, as an customer, when i bought a new tv ... i dont know, it made me feel special somehow 😞 I liked the vagueness, the mystery of it all. But now it turns out, your tv has already been watched, touched and even cleaned several times before you even get to press the remote button, at home on your couch.
I hope you're joking 😅. Obviously every product is tested before it leaves the factory, this applies to everything that is manufactured by any company.
Sorry but it was not interesting.
Drilling/soldering/testing/packing stuff in cardboard is standard.
Too bad we did not see how the panel is made, because it's the only thing that fascinates me.
prob the slowest assembly ever
all these manufacturing complications, and still it's so fragile (i.e. bending, ghosting, and whatnot).
That's a lot of manual labour that can't be reliably automated. However, picking just the first TV in a batch to check, rather than the first and a random one around the middle it's likely to miss any shortcuts the workers might have started to take in their routine. Quality control should be an ongoing process, not a one-time deal.
Slightly click baity title mate, this is a video on how oleds are tested, not made.
Nothing here was manufactured in this video. This is an assembly factory - this video shows how a TV is assembled, not manufactured
@@ms3862 err, the video literally starts from AFTER the screen panel has already been made and put together, most of the video is watching a guy screw on the plastic back panel 🤣
well that definitely explains the price tag
Makes more sense once I found out this is some very expensive TV brand as that was the slowest electronics assembly and testing line I've ever seen.
That’s an excellent depiction of why Germany is lagging today behind Asia/US as an economy 😅
Excellent, thanks man.
I'm really surprised the dead pixel check is done manually. I feel like that's a check which would be incredibly simple to automate, surely?
this is cool
Thank you
Next time maybe show how the OLED itself is made - not a super-low volume assembly plant boxing budget models by hand. Cutting the mother glass? Nope. Vapor deposition? Nope. TFT layer etching? Nope. Phosphorescent dye manufacture? Nope. Quantum dot manufacture? Nope. Surface coating manufacture? Nope. Literally any engineering involved? Nope. But here's some dudes fumbling with cardboard boxes instead.
Agreed, this is just final assembly, testing and packaging. Most large companies out there now do all of this in Mexico (at least with their TVs destined for the US market)
Their 65" OLED TV costs about 4000€ or about double what you can get a comparable LG for with the exact same panel. It's a luxury brand for German instagram home decorators. They probably sell a couple hundred of these a year.
I'm quite interested, if the monitor is calibrated in the production line, how does it perform against the Sony/Samsung/LG TV's?
At first I thought you were going to show how the panel itself is made this is just an assembly night interesting but just an assembly line
Oled best for home...qled best fpr outdoor big malls
I bought a Samsung S95D, can you do a video on Calibrating the Samsung S95D for a great picture setting.
Why we didn't see the greatest mistery? How do they apply that satisfying to remove film over the panel 🤔
I'm not sure why but I thought this whole process from start to finish would be automated....and much faster. No wonder OLEDs are expensive.
Awesome & Thanks :)
Have never heard of this brand before, how do they compare to the big brands like lg, sony etc?
Its a luxury german brand, like Leica today. Nothing their own, simply design and brand
Pretty decent, the screen are from LG Display. Good quality screens. There are probably a lower level of quality on electric components. That way they can keep the cost down.
@@gummibando Are you sure they use their own boards and image processing units?
What model was this specific one btw?!
Population bounding of lots is essential in quality control. 😊
It'd be nice if they did QD OLED 😊
wow you found a person exactly looking like you. That's funny stuff.
Wondering if you tried the jailbreak for the lg web os. i got the lg c1.
There was a lack of caps for the workers!
First?? Always wondered how Oled’s are are made and put together..
No wonder Ole is so expensive. I thought they were cranking these things out 100 panels per hour!
Now i understand why my OLED came bent.
Its interessting once to see how looking a mordern tv at the inside.
Do employees get tvs for free? I just want to know for a friend
LOL Loewe is extremely overpriced.
Like they want 10k for a 65 inch.
And they don't even seem to have any special interesting tech to get more out of the picture. It is still the same LG OLED panel, you can buy a top of the line from LG for about 3k. You can buy a new one every year for many years for the price of one of those Loewe tv's. To me they always seemed like a brand for people with more money than sense.
im here after watching how cathrode ray tubes are made (tube tvs).
hey vincent, were you in Kronach? 🙂
Im realy hoping to se the TCL 98p745 getting reviewed by you
PC enthusiast who build their own computers are disappointed with it just being TV assembly video lol
Unseen my asss...
Half a million subs and every video still has the same B roll footage
Please show us how the panel is made