Posts Tagged ‘7 (seven) segment’

What happens to LCD’s when they become cold?

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

Response Time Graph

What happens to LCD’s when they become cold?

Liquid crystal displays are just like their name… they contain a liquid between two layers of glass. Liquids begin to freeze as the temperature drops. As the display freezes their response time slows down. In other words, it takes longer for the numbers and letters on the display to change (Turn ON or Turn OFF).

Above is a graph showing the response time of a display at -30°C (-22°F).

The best way I can think to explain this is a ceiling fan. When you turn off the ceiling fan the blades continue to turn for a few minutes, even though the power if OFF. When you turn ON a ceiling fan the blades will be at full speed in a shorter period of time. At most the blades will be at their max speed within 30 seconds. When talking about an LCD, we talk about when the display is ON (the characters can be seen) or OFF (the characters cannot be seen).

On the graph above there are two measurements. The left side is how dark the letters are; the larger the number the darker the letter. Along the bottom of the graph is the amount of time it takes to go from ON to OFF, or to go from OFF to ON. (Note: 1000mS is the same as 1 second).

Line ‘A’ displays the amount of time it takes for a character or segment on the display to turn OFF. That is, once you turn OFF the segment, how long does it take before it disappears? The graph above shows that the character actually ‘disappears’ 3500 milliseconds (3.5 seconds) after the display is turned OFF.

Line ‘B’ displays the amount of time it takes for the character or segment to turn ON. In the above graph the segment is only 55% ‘ON’ at 8000 milliseconds (8 seconds). That means the character is only ½ (half) ON. It will look grey and not very dark. It requires more time for the display to turn ON than to turn OFF… just the opposite of a ceiling fan.

We do not recommend operating our wide temperature (extended temperature) displays below -20°C (-4°F). This is true for all segment displays (static displays or glass displays), 7 (seven) segment, 14 (fourteen) segment and 16 (sixteen) segment LCD’s.

Alphanumeric LCD displays such as: 8×1 LCD Display, 8×2 LCD Display, 16×1 LCD Display, 16×2 LCD Display, 16×4 LCD Display, 20×2 LCD Display, 20×4 LCD Display, 24×2 LCD Display, 40×1 LCD Display, 40×2 LCD Display, 40×4 LCD Display will react the same way.

Safety Stock in Inventory

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

Is safety stock back in style?

Many suppliers do not want to carry excess inventory. It was not good business sense to tie up your cash and hope someone will come along and purchase your product. But this is changing.

The style is changing. Why?

  1. Lead times on segment displays, character and alphanumeric LCD’s have increased in the last few months. Customers (OEM’s) need inventory in a week or two, not 12 to 16 weeks after they place their purchase order.
  2. Many LCD suppliers are discontinuing their LCD displays. This is true for 16×1, 16×2, 20×2, 8×1, 8×2, 20×4 LCD displays. We receive calls for CCFL and EL backlights often. There is still a demand for 7 (seven) segment, 14(fourteen) segment, and 16(sixteen) segment static displays. It seems that many suppliers are scaling back on monochrome displays.
  3. Earning interest on cash in the bank is at an all time low.

Please call us if you need a replacement STN, FSTN or TN character LCD.