plastic lcd display free sample

Established in 2010, Topfoison has devoted itself to the manufacturing and development of high-quality products for the Wearable device, Smart Watch, VR, Medical device, Industrial LCD display including Color LCD modules/OLED/LCD display/Round lcd screen/Round AMOLED/ Square transflective lcd screen/ IPS full wide display/ 1080p fhd AMOLED and 2K 1440p lcd. Topfoison focus on1.22-7.0 inch small size displays, all the products produced in our company enjoys the most advanced production craft and technology as well as the strictly ISO quality management system.

Established in 2010, Topfoison has devoted itself to the manufacturing and development of high-quality products for the Wearable device, Smart Watch, VR, Medical device, Industrial LCD display including Color LCD modules/OLED/LCD display/Round lcd screen/Round AMOLED/ Square transflective lcd screen/ IPS full wide display/ 1080p fhd AMOLED and 2K 1440p lcd. Topfoison focus on1.22-7.0 inch small size displays, all the products produced in our company enjoys the most advanced production craft and technology as well as the strictly ISO quality management system.

Most of EM"s Plastic LCD products are customer specific designs. EM is used to accommodate to the particular requests and to engineer solutions, which optimally fit the customer"s requirements.

FlexEnable’s glass-free organic LCD (OLCD) delivers high-brightness, long lifetime flexible displays that are low cost and scalable to large areas, while also being thin, lightweight and shatterproof.
OLCD is a plastic display technology with full colour and video-rate capability. It enables product companies to create striking designs and realise novel use cases by merging the display into the product design rather than accommodating it by the design.
Unlike flexible OLED displays, which are predominantly adopted in flagship smartphones and smartwatches, OLCD opens up the use of flexible displays to a wider range of mass-market applications. It has several attributes that make it better suited than flexible OLED to applications across large-area consumer electronics, smart home appliances, automotive, notebooks and tablets, and digital signage.
OLCD can be conformed and wrapped around surfaces and cut into non-rectangular shapes during the production process. Holes can be also added to fit around the functional design of the system – for example around knobs and switches.
As with glass-based LCD, the lifetime of OLCD is independent of the display brightness, because it is achieved through transmission of a separate light source (the backlight), rather than emission of its own light. For example OLCD can be made ultra-bright for viewing in daylight conditions without affecting the display lifetime – an important requirement for vehicle surface-integrated displays.
OLCD is the lowest cost flexible display technology – it is three to four times lower cost that flexible OLED today. This is because it makes use of existing display factories and supply chain and deploys a low temperature process that results in low manufacturing costs and high yield.
Unlike other flexible display approaches, OLCD is naturally scalable to large sizes. It can be made as small or as large as the manufacturing equipment used for flat panel displays allows.
The flexibility of OLCD allows an ultra-narrow bezel to be implemented by folding down the borders behind the display. This brings huge value in applications like notebooks and tablets where borderless means bigger displays for the same sized device. The bezel size allowed by OLCD is independent of the display size or resolution. In addition, OLCD can make a notebook up to 100g lighter and 0.5mm thinner.
OLCD is the key to the fabrication of ultra-high contrast dual cell displays with true pixel level dimming, offering OLED-like performance at a fraction of the cost. The extremely thin OLCD substrate brings advantages in cost, viewing angle and module thickness compared to glass displays. At the same time OLCD retains the flexibility required for applications such as surface-integrated automotive displays.
Due to its unique properties, OLCD has the potential to transform how and where displays are used in products. The videos below give a glimpse into this innovative technology.
OLCD brings the benefits of being thin, light, shatterproof and conformable, while offering the same quality and performance as traditional glass LCDs. The mechanical advantages of plastic OLCD over glass LCD are further enhanced by the technology’s excellent optical performance, much of which originates from the extreme thinness of plastic TAC substrates compared to glass.

The MPC 1000 XLCD Large ( 240 x 128 ) LCD screen doubles the screen size of the MPC1000. The XLCD screen utilizes the mounting points of the original factory LCD. This new screen comes mounted in the plastic holder surround and easily drops in the place of the old one. With a simple install of the included operating system update, you upgrade to a much larger LCD screen.
The LCD screen is available in two colors (White and Blue), which can also be inverted using a function in the JJ OS128 operating system included for free. The operating system allows this larger LCD screen to utilize the full capabilities of the MPC1000 with a larger overall LCD screen footprint.
- LCD Screen with complete snap in housing, and plug and play design wire harness foreasy install and uninstall.Please Note: The housings are B Stock and have a small line on the top of them. If you have any questions about this please email us at sales@mpcstuff.com Its small but slightlynoticeable. It does not hinder usage of the LCD screen.
The LCD screen is very easily installed as you can see from our instructional video linked below. Typical install takes about 10-15 minutes and only requires a Phillips screwdriver and flat head screwdriver. (Please note: MPCstuff is not responsible for any issues that may arise when you are installing screen).
To learn more about the operating system, click here. There are several operational videos below. If you are interested in a more full-featured version of the OS, the paid version of the JJ OS made specifically for this LCD screen is available from JJ OS click here.
PLEASE NOTE: Akai is a registered trademark of Akai Pro. These LCD screens are not made or endorsed by Akai Pro. The OS is made by JJ OS. They are aftermarket products and should be installed at your own risk.

The MPC2500XLCD Large ( 240 x 128 ) LCD screen doubles the screen size of the MPC2500. The XLCD screen utilizes the mounting points of the original factory LCD. This new LCD screen comes mounted in the plastic holder surround and easily drops in the place of the old one. With a simple install of the included operating system update, you upgrade to a much larger LCD screen. The LCD screen is available in two colors (White and Blue), which can also be inverted (see pictures) using a function in the JJ OS128 operating system included for free. The operating system allows this larger LCD screen to utilize the full capabilities of the MPC2500 with a larger overall LCD screen footprint.
LCD Screen with complete tilt housing, and plug and play design wire harness. These screens DO NOT need an external contrast POT like you may have seen in the early release of the screens and in the install video. You will need to use the brass grommets from your old LCD screen when installing the XLCD.
The LCD screen is very easily installed as you can see from our instructional video linked below. Typical install takes about 20-30 minutes and only requires a Phillips screwdriver. (Please note: MPCstuff is not responsible for any issues that may arise when you are installing screen).
ABOUT THE OPERATING SYSTEM: To learn more about the operating system, click here. There are a several operational videos below. If you are interested in a more full-featured version of the OS, the paid version of the JJ OS made specifically for this LCD screen is available from JJ OS click here.
PLEASE NOTE: Akai is a registered trademark of Akai Pro. These LCD screens are not made or endorsed by Akai Pro. The OS is made by JJ OS. They are aftermarket products and should be installed at your own risk. Without installing the new OS the LCD screen will only show on half of the screen, just as it did with the smaller LCD screen.

I"m looking for an enclosure for a project that will include one of the 2x8 character LCDs from seeedstudio and should have an IR panel and battery enclosure.
but accoring to the datasheet, the internal dimension is 60mm wide and according to seeedstudio, the LCD is 58mm wide. I"m worried I"ll have trouble fitting the LCD because it"s cutting too close, or in the best case the aesthetics will suffer because the display will be too far off center (it doesn"t look centered on its own PCB).
I"m working with a similar sized LCD but it"s going behind a panel rather than in a box. I am lucky that I can make my own cutout and fit the LCD into it. I"m not real sure how I"m going to protect the LCD though - it will be exposed to the elements.
oh, by the way, I have one of the Seeed modules in my hand and I would say the LCD face is pretty well centered on the board. It"s not EXACT but no more than a couple of mm further from the backlight end of the board than the connector end.
I have the seeedstudio LCD too. It was my original request that he stock them ;). I"m thinking a few mm off will look pretty crappy in the box though.
What trouble are you having getting it to work? It"s working for me, but I had to modify the time delays in the arduino liquidcystal library (the problem was with the library, not the display). I had a horribly frustrating time where it would work once in a while, but 95% of the time would never initialize.
I am having trouble with the 60mm red-green 8x8 matrix display though. I"ve only tested by directly connecting to the LEDs, through a resistor of course, and the brightness is very, very dim.
What trouble are you having getting it to work? It"s working for me, but I had to modify the time delays in the arduino liquidcystal library (the problem was with the library, not the display). I had a horribly frustrating time where it would work once in a while, but 95% of the time would never initialize.
I would get either blank or sometimes the black character boxes showing (I now know) that it was getting power. This was the first LCD module I bought and I had not yet learned about the liquidcrystal library so i was working just from the datasheet. The problem could have been my wiring or my code. I have it out now and I"ll try it again. What timing did you have to change?
In terms of centering, I just don"t believe I could detect the offset, maybe mine is not quite the same. How are you going to make the cutout for the LCD and attach it?
it looks better now since ive taped the sides but it was impossible to cut a perfect rectangle witha dremel, nor a box cutter, so i had to sand and sand, and, ofcourse, i over sanded and ended up with huge, awkward gaps between the sides of the lcd screen and the box...
it looks better now since ive taped the sides but it was impossible to cut a perfect rectangle witha dremel, nor a box cutter, so i had to sand and sand, and, ofcourse, i over sanded and ended up with huge, awkward gaps between the sides of the lcd screen and the box...
exactly what I"ve been worrying about. I foolishly expected there would be readily available plastic/chrome bezels that would fit neatly around stock-sized LCDs, no luck yet though.
One thing I"ve used is a shadow box. It"s like a picture frame but instead of holding a flat page it"s got an internal compartment to hold and display 3D objects. I paid around $10 at a crafts store for a 5x7 with about 2 inches inside. It came with a glass front and a felt-lined pressboard back. I made all the holes in the back board.
I got a couple of sample boxes like the one below from pactec. They have a wide variety on their web site. In this case the end is separate but probably too small for the LCD and the sides of the cases just leave you with the same issue of cutting your own hole and finishing it.
If waterproofing/dustproofing is not important, you can just sandwich your project (PCB, LCD etc) between 2 sheets of acrylic, with long screws and spacers.
I"m still surprised that there aren"t more readily available LCD mounting options. In my case I need something really weatherproof because I"m mounting on an exposed motorcycle surface but I haven"t see anything that would help finish off a project.
I think it is amazing that there isn"t already on the market a simpe palstic box with rectangular holes the size of the screens on LCD"s, which are all pretty standard.
Mike, I don"t think there is a single standard. I have three 16x2 LCD panels and all require different size cutouts. My 16x1 and 16x4 panels are different sizes again.
For your weatherproof project, why not use florinc"s suggestion of a pelikan or otterbox? They"re expensive, but very weatherproof and available with clear tops for the display. For the interface if needed, you can rig up something IR so you don"t have to comprimise the weatherproofing.
Ms.Josey
Ms.Josey