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Quote from: mikeselectricstuff on October 25, 2017, 08:54:05 pmQuote from: KE5FX on October 25, 2017, 08:48:43 pmIt only makes sense to use an antique fixed-segment LCD if you know you will not face any market competition. It's a hobby project in that case, not a commercial one...or you care about power consumption. Or long-term security of supplyOr cost. Or sunlight readability.I'm skeptical about the middle two, certainly. When you design something with a weird part -- and a custom LCD is certainly a "weird part" -- you are at the mercy of your supplier, specifically future changes to their minimums and lead times.
Quote from: KE5FX on October 25, 2017, 08:48:43 pmIt only makes sense to use an antique fixed-segment LCD if you know you will not face any market competition. It's a hobby project in that case, not a commercial one...or you care about power consumption. Or long-term security of supplyOr cost. Or sunlight readability.
It only makes sense to use an antique fixed-segment LCD if you know you will not face any market competition. It's a hobby project in that case, not a commercial one.
Cost-wise, the best way to attack that problem is just to assume that you'll have to hit alibaba.com every so often to find the next big load of surplus panels that someone's dumping on the market.
Power consumption... well, it's a power supply, isn't it?
A battery powered one.
Quote from: mikeselectricstuff on October 25, 2017, 09:49:56 pmA battery powered one.Might be a good application for E-ink, if factors like battery life and readability in sunlight are important. There are usually plenty of surplus panels on the market.
Quote from: KE5FX on October 25, 2017, 09:05:08 pmQuote from: mikeselectricstuff on October 25, 2017, 08:54:05 pmQuote from: KE5FX on October 25, 2017, 08:48:43 pmIt only makes sense to use an antique fixed-segment LCD if you know you will not face any market competition. It's a hobby project in that case, not a commercial one...or you care about power consumption. Or long-term security of supplyOr cost. Or sunlight readability.I'm skeptical about the middle two, certainly. When you design something with a weird part -- and a custom LCD is certainly a "weird part" -- you are at the mercy of your supplier, specifically future changes to their minimums and lead times. Worst case you can take your design to another supplier, with suitable MOQ/leadtimes. Custom glass is cheap once tooled, so you can afford to keep a decent amount of stock
Quote Cost-wise, the best way to attack that problem is just to assume that you'll have to hit alibaba.com every so often to find the next big load of surplus panels that someone's dumping on the market. And have to redesign due to a different connector or pinout or flex length. If you can still even get the same size and mechanical mounting detail. And take pot luck on quality.
Quote from: KE5FX on October 25, 2017, 08:48:43 pmIt only makes sense to use an antique fixed-segment LCD if you know you will not face any market competition. It's a hobby project in that case, not a commercial one.Actually this is an EEVBlog project. The revenue from the video discussing the making of the custom LCD will probably cover the cost. I'm looking forward to seeing the video.
Latest version:
I can't remember exactly, the unit price of the LCD is about 20 something, the back-light is about 10 something, CNY.I think they are cheap enough, the only problem is they asked for a minimum order quantity, which was 6,000 pcs.
I think the dot matrix display on this product will make it look more "hobby". A nice clear custom LCD to me has the vibe of "professional design" rather than just "oh, it's an Alibaba matrix display in a box.
And the most important thing, I like segment LCD's and as a bonus it will make an interesting video of the process of doing it.
That obviously wasn't true for the 3446x DMMs. It's the content and presentation that count, not the choice of display components.... except that one of those component options constrains the content and presentation severely, compared to the other.Many good ideas have been posted by various people in this thread, none of which can be implemented once you hit 'Send' on the email containing your LCD design files. That would bug me.
and i don't like square displays.
Bare in mind this product might be entirely different to what some people are expecting.
That obviously wasn't true for the 3446x DMMs. It's the content and presentation that count, not the choice of display components.... except that one of those component options constrains the content and presentation severely, compared to the other.
Take a look at the U8001 frontpanel from agilent. simplicity and functionality
Well it would help if we knew anything aside from what we can guess from front panel
I'm afraid not.
...but David2 ... is paid real full time engineering wages.
Quote from: gamalot on October 25, 2017, 11:20:40 pmI can't remember exactly, the unit price of the LCD is about 20 something, the back-light is about 10 something, CNY.I think they are cheap enough, the only problem is they asked for a minimum order quantity, which was 6,000 pcs.Did you order the 6000 or just get samples after paying the tooling?
I thought the design is ready but needs modifications. Will it be different than the one described in the videos?
Quote from: VEGETA on October 26, 2017, 08:18:37 amI thought the design is ready but needs modifications. Will it be different than the one described in the videos?Yes, entirely new design.