Why large tablet screens reveal more
A bigger panel gives your eyes more space to compare corners, edges, and the center, which makes unevenness easier to detect.
That is why white, gray, and near-black checks are especially helpful on OLED tablets.
Best testing sequence on an iPad Pro OLED panel
Use white for tint, gray for banding, black for retention, and primary colors for pixel defects or channel imbalance.
Inspect both portrait and landscape if you use the tablet in multiple orientations.
When the result matters most
Uniformity issues matter more on tablets used for drawing, reading, design, or watching large smooth backgrounds.
Compare test results with your actual use case before deciding whether a defect is acceptable.
FAQ
Why does tint show more clearly on large tablets?
The larger panel makes it easier to compare one area of the screen against another.
Should I test an iPad Pro screen in both orientations?
Yes. Different orientations can make certain edge and corner issues easier to notice.
Which pattern is best for tablet banding checks?
Gray is usually the fastest way to reveal banding and dirty-screen effect.
Run the test now
Use the OLED Test homepage to open fullscreen colors, inspect uniformity, and compare panel behavior in real time. The browser-based workflow is fast, free, and works well for quick repeat checks.