- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Here are some Pics.
I actually have no Idea. It seems like their are 12 (2 rows of 6) IC which manage the whole thing.They are REALY large and ar...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
The large chips are probably shift registers. Serial in and parallel out with drivers.
It is not uncommon to find a 12 pin bus on a display, mayb...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Sounds good. Additionaly I have found 2 rows of 7 Chips, which are also connected to the display like the 12 other. But these are much smaller.
t...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Helloooooo!!
Im waking up this old thread after eight years of slumber.
Did you ever get anywhere with this display ? I aquired one today an...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
have a look at contacting a chinese manufacturer from those selling cheap LCD controllers, mentioning a connector like that one...
last time I ha...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Although this is not a LCD panel, and i have more or less confirmed its just your bogstandard CGA input, but with the addition of a data shift/pixel c...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
I think i have this thing figured out now, it has two 4bit parallel buses offering two levels of grayscale.
A video: https://www.youtube.com/watc...
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Tied the four data inputs together and fed them the vsync signal inverted throigh a 7414: http://imgur.com/LbYossD
- Posted by Madgyver on Thursday 20 April 2006 - 15:57:45
Thats pretty neat!
These displays also emit a fair amount of infrared which is why they are behind special glass.
Without this you might find TV r...
- Posted by Desmogod on Tuesday 14 March 2006 - 01:06:49
Not at all, It's running CW.
I have no idea why it's broken up, maybe the same reason you see chopper blades and fan blades when they are spinning. ...