The 16-inch display on the Legion R9000P leverages the specific advantages of inkjet printing, which forms organic light-emitting films through a streamlined deposition process rather than traditional vacuum thermal evaporation. This method removes the reliance on expensive fine metal masks, potentially lowering production costs while maintaining high-end characteristics like high contrast and deep color saturation.
Technical performance remains a priority for the integration. The panel features a 240Hz refresh rate and a Real RGB Stripe subpixel arrangement, a design choice intended to eliminate the text blurring and color fringing often associated with standard OLED triangular layouts. With 99% coverage of the DCI-P3 color gamut, the screen aims to satisfy both professional designers and entertainment users.
TCL CSOT has invested over a decade into this technology, utilizing its 5.5-generation production line in Wuhan to transition toward mass-market availability. By moving from niche medical displays to mainstream laptop hardware, the company intends to scale its 8.6-generation production capabilities. This rollout represents a strategic effort to prove that inkjet-printed panels can compete with traditional OLED manufacturing in both visual fidelity and commercial viability.





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