lcd panel 30 pin connector brands

This is a page where you can find common laptop/desktop LCD panel pinouts and see if your laptop screen"s pinout matches any one of them (it likely does!).

This is a very common pinout for higher-resolution CCFL displays. If you have a 1440x900, 1400x1050 or 1680x1050 panel, it"s likely using this pinout.

This is a pinout for desktop LCD monitor screens - laptop panels do not use this pinout (if there are some, let me know). If you"re ordering a MT6820 (MT561) board, it will arrive with a cable that has this specific pinout and is therefore incompatible with laptop screens - as you"re likely here to reuse a laptop screen, you will want to either rewire the cable you get, or order a suitable cable (for either A or B pinout, whichever you need) from the beginning.

This is a pinout for older, 1024x768 and similar laptop screens, CCFL-equipped ones. 1024x768 screens used both the A pinout, this pinout and even a different pinout with a connector I haven"t made a description for yet, so if you have a 1024x768 screen you"d like to reuse, there"s three possible options and you need to check which one you have before you buy/reuse/build a cable.

This is a pinout that"s, apparently, specific to a select range of 18.5" 1366x768 displays used in desktop LCD monitors. It"s not compatible with either A, B or C pinouts, and requires a specifically wired cable.

In some datasheets, the pinout will list extra pins - one before and one after the main pins, both would be described something like "shield GND". So, for a FI-X 30-pin connector, you might find a pinout in your datasheet that lists 32 pins instead of 30. These two pins are not "real" connector pins and you shouldn"t worry about them - they"re pins that the manufacturer decided to mention for some reason, but they"re not relevant when you are actually connecting to the panel.