If your TV is running low on power, you may be tempted to turn it off and hope that it will turn back on when you have a chance to recharge the battery. However, this is not always the best solution. In fact, turning your TV off can actually shorten its life by significantly reducing its ability to operate properly. Instead of turning your TV off, try using backup power if you are able. This means plugging in your TV to an outlet or battery pack if you have one available. If not, try using a power strip or extension cord. Just make sure that the power source is reliable and has enough juice to keep your TV running for an extended period of time. If all else fails and your TV does not have any backup power options available, you may need to take it into a service center or replace it altogether. However, by taking these simple steps before things get too far out of hand, you can ensure that your television will continue to function properly for a longer period of time. ..
How Much Power Can You Really Save?
To demonstrate how much of a difference changing your TV settings can make to its power draw, we’re using a 555Wh lithium battery pure sine inverter that shows the current power draw on its display. The power pack also estimates how much time is left before running out of juice.
If the load is 100W, you’ll consume 500Wh of power in five hours. On the other hand, if the load is 50W, the time doubles. Any reduction in power consumption leads directly to longer running times. It’s the difference between watching all of the Lord of the Rings movies and running out of power halfway through The Two Towers.
First, we took a reading with the TV after resetting its picture settings to default. The TV in question is a 70″ Samsung UHD model from 2021. The power draw levels shown are while using the built-in Netflix app to watch the same bright scene from Interstellar.
As you can see, with the default picture settings this TV uses out of the box (and which many people never change) the power draw while watching is almost 200W. That would drain this power pack in just over two hours! What about after making some tweaks?
After making our power-saving adjustments, that number drops all the way to around 40W, pushing the total run time up to around 10 hours! That’s a massive improvement. As we found, the visual sacrifices aren’t particularly severe, either. Now that you’ve seen what a difference toggling a few settings can make, let’s look at what you can do to cut the power consumption of your own television.
Activate the Power Saving Mode
Most modern televisions include a power-saving mode you can activate from the system menu. In the case of this Samsung TV, it’s known as “Eco Solution.” The exact details will differ between models and brands of television.
If your TV does offer such a mode, it’s a great place to start. This mode essentially applies most of the tips we’re going to list in the rest of this article automatically, and in some cases does things to save power that you normally can’t do through other menu settings.
It should also be possible to tweak the power saving mode, such as in this case where you can set the minimum brightness level the TV should not drop below.
Turn Down the Brightness as Much as Possible
The biggest culprit when it comes to power draw is brightness. Whether you’re using an LCD with a backlight or an OLED that creates its own light, making those photons takes a lot of power. Turn the brightness down as low as you can tolerate and you should see a dramatic decrease in how much power your TV consumes. You can compensate for the lower brightness levels by darkening the room during the day.
RELATED: What Are Nits of Brightness on a TV or Other Display?
Activate Automatic Brightness Adjustment
Many modern TVs have a light sensor that will automatically adjust the brightness level to match the light level in the room. This offers a compromise between setting a fixed low brightness level and wasting power on an unnecessarily bright TV.
Disable or Avoid HDR
HDR or High Dynamic Range TVs can exceed the brightness level of the more common SDR (Standard Dynamic Range), offering much better contrast, deep blacks, vivid colors, and amazing detail in bright parts of images. It also uses way more power than SDR, so turn it off while running on battery power if you have the option.
While your TV may not have a universal HDR toggle in its menus, you can often disable it in individual smart apps or use an HDMI port that does not support HDR, which is common for secondary or tertiary ports.
RELATED: HDR Formats Compared: HDR10, Dolby Vision, HLG, and Technicolor
Use Built-In Apps
It usually takes less power to run an app like Netflix natively on your smart TV than to run it from an external device like an Apple TV, which adds its own wattage requirements to your backup power system. While the built-in apps in smart TVs don’t always offer the best experience, here it’s a fair tradeoff, in our opinion.
Turn Down The Volume or Use Bluetooth
Whether you’re using the TV’s built-in speakers or external speakers, turning down the volume will reduce how much power you need to run everything. Your television may also offer a “night mode” or a volume normalization option. This normalizes the difference between the loudest and softest parts of the soundtrack and also handily solves the problem of inaudible dialogue but thunderous action scenes. Alternatively, some TV sets also offer a dialogue clarity mode with a similar effect.
If you’re the only one watching, consider using Bluetooth earbuds or headphones if your television supports it. Streaming Bluetooth audio takes much less energy than playing sound over loudspeakers and most Bluetooth headsets will run for longer than almost any blackout and are easy to recharge.
Other Tips to Save Power
We’ve covered the tips that will have the biggest impact on your TV’s power consumption, but there are several smaller things you can do if you really want to squeeze every last drop from your battery time.
First, your inverter may offer the option to supply DC power directly, which means you can bypass the wasteful DC to AC and then back to DC conversion that happens when you plug your TV’s power brick into a battery-powered inverter. Triple-check that the output from the inverter’s DC output perfectly matches what the TV expects through its DC input, but this can add a small percentage of extra runtime since you’re not losing energy during power conversion.
If you have multiple televisions, the smallest model generally uses the least power, although this can differ by backlight or panel technology type. All things being equal, a 75-inch TV will use more power than a 55-inch TV.
Consider storing content on a USB flash drive for viewing during blackouts. If you avoid using Wi-Fi, that can also save a small amount of power. It also means you don’t have to expend power keeping your internet connection going if it’s using the same pool of battery power. If you’re using satellite or cable television, keep in mind what the power requirements of their hardware components are!