MacBook Pro Retina display burn-in?

I first noticed this after my MBP [Retina] had gone to sleep, but: when returning to the login screen (since I have it set to require a password whenever the computer is idle long enough) I noticed what appeared to a very faint ghosting primarily noticeable on darker backgrounds.


After messing around with it a bit, there seems to be a fairly consistent in-display ghosting that occurs without much time at all; I was able to leave my screen on (a little above half-brightness) for about 10-15 minutes and the ghosted "burn" would be of the screen I left it on (which I deliberately reconfigured so that everything would be a new position).


Has anyone else experienced this? Is this a normal thing that I just have to get used to? It's not really noticeable at all in standard use.

MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012), Mac OS X (10.7.4)

Posted on Jun 16, 2012 10:26 PM

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9,629 replies

Oct 20, 2013 5:11 PM in response to LifeReceiver

Just got my 4th display back and it's the SJA2. I'm not seeing any IR at all. I ran several tests on backgrounds that always show ghosting and I don't see the slightest hint of it. Better yet the colors look wonderful compared to the yellow Samsung they gave me last week. I'm happy, way to go Apple! We'll see how it does over the next few months. I purchased AppleCare (B&H is $100 cheaper than Apple) in case it ever does rear its ugly head again.

Oct 21, 2013 12:03 PM in response to LifeReceiver

Basically the pixels would not respond or act uniformly which causes the IR. The reasons pixels act like that is the problem of non-uniform electric charges across the screen itself ( pixels ) and is probably because of the impurities in manufacturing exceeding some limits.

the case with Retina display is that there are so many pixels in a 15.4" display which causes the impurities be very close to each other, and the ionic electric charge accumalte when a set of pixels are commanded to display a certain colour for a longer time.

the longer the pixels show a certain colour, more charge is accumulated although there is a saturation charge limit.

to conclude, the manufacturing route of displays as well as surrounding elements of manufacturing route plus other manufacturing factors have a great impact on display's quality. I think with some revisions which are of course expensive, LG could also come up with an IR-free display.

Oct 22, 2013 2:17 PM in response to mittense

This is what I am also wondering. It appears to me from everything that I can garner from this keynote that the display has not changed at least publically.


I had placed my order today but cancelled it because of the "tax" I was charged and would resolve that issue first through the University before ordering it.


However, I'm kind of wondering if the Broadwell processor will be out in June and will they update the Pro's again then with that processor and a redesigned machine....ahh the waiting game, I've been playing it since these Retina's came out here but I've been patiently waiting to order a new one but I sure don't want a bad one either.


Can't wait till someone can start giving feedback on these latest ones.

Oct 22, 2013 9:29 PM in response to krnorth

But broadwell is going to be exclusively for desktops I think, the only thing that might make a difference is if they haven't changed the display then wait for the ruomored IGZO, also also crystalwell -Iris 5200- may prove to be inadequate for 15" starting model...

So I guess I'll tag along with you body in the waiting game till february and see the feedback from the generous members.


Good luck

Oct 23, 2013 6:32 AM in response to 2B-4G10

After waiting a year and a half to buy a new MBP because of the image retention problem, I finally ordered one of the new Haswells yesterday. I have been following the thread mostly silently because I didn't own a retina display. But my 2006 17" MBP has a broken hinge and is in two halves now and can't be moved. I ordered the top of the line: 16GB, 1TB, 2.6Hz Quad Core i7. Surprisingly, there is no wait and it will ship in 2 - 4 days, be here in a week. Will report as soon as I get it.


One of the things that make me a little curious is the fact that (most of) the rest of the world outside these forums is oblivious to the retina display problem. I know this has been addressed here before several times. I've played with machines at the Apples store numerous times and showed the retention to "shocked" employees on multiple machines, but the fact that there is no hue and cry from the genaeral population of MBP owners is mystifying.

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MacBook Pro Retina display burn-in?

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