Which display should i buy ??
Hello there..
Im going to buy/install a lcd display in my black Lian Li case. I looking for a display with a black backgroud, and a text that is bright enough to see from a few meters distance.. I need it 4x20.
Im looking at the vfd display VFD2041 (116$) but i think its a lottle pricy when you look at LCD2041 (55$) they are both identical (besides colour)
Is there a way to stay with LCD, and in the same time get that black background and good bright text ?
Im going to buy/install a lcd display in my black Lian Li case. I looking for a display with a black backgroud, and a text that is bright enough to see from a few meters distance.. I need it 4x20.
Im looking at the vfd display VFD2041 (116$) but i think its a lottle pricy when you look at LCD2041 (55$) they are both identical (besides colour)
Is there a way to stay with LCD, and in the same time get that black background and good bright text ?
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- LCD Geek
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Holy shit - that look nice! Im no longer wondering wich display to buy..
OldOne i just have a quick question i REALY hope you can help me with (im a newbee in the lcd area)
I've long been wanting to do those LED mods (email, fans etc etc) The question is, do I just sold them to the GPO's and then configure the use of them in lcdc ? or do i need to do alot of technical stuff to sort out volts and watts ?
If i can just sold the diodes to the GPO's, then i just need the VK204-25 (with 6 GPO's) to make the trick.. Or am i completly lost
OldOne i just have a quick question i REALY hope you can help me with (im a newbee in the lcd area)
I've long been wanting to do those LED mods (email, fans etc etc) The question is, do I just sold them to the GPO's and then configure the use of them in lcdc ? or do i need to do alot of technical stuff to sort out volts and watts ?
If i can just sold the diodes to the GPO's, then i just need the VK204-25 (with 6 GPO's) to make the trick.. Or am i completly lost

Hi.
Don't just solder the diodes onto the GPO-pins. Use for instance an old cable from a pc-case (reset switch cable works fine) and solder the diode to that. If you don't want to use resistors along with the diodes, you need diodes with built-in resistors, also called 5v-diodes. The normal is to use a resistor in series with the led. 220 ohms will give you a current of about 15mA for the regular red, green or yellow led.
Stig
Don't just solder the diodes onto the GPO-pins. Use for instance an old cable from a pc-case (reset switch cable works fine) and solder the diode to that. If you don't want to use resistors along with the diodes, you need diodes with built-in resistors, also called 5v-diodes. The normal is to use a resistor in series with the led. 220 ohms will give you a current of about 15mA for the regular red, green or yellow led.
Stig
Hi.
Not transistor...resistor..
I think you can get 5v blue leds too, but it's just as easy to use a resistor in series with the diode, just a lower resistance for the blue ones. It's very easy to calculate the resistance for the resistor..
R = (5v - U(led)) / I(led)
U(led) depends on the diode. The regular red, green or yellow normally are around 1.7 - 1.8V, while the blue ones can be from 2.5 - 4.5V.
I(led) is the current through the led, and 10 - 15 mA will normally be fine.
If you use I(led) in mA, then R will be in kilo-ohms.
Stig
Not transistor...resistor..

I think you can get 5v blue leds too, but it's just as easy to use a resistor in series with the diode, just a lower resistance for the blue ones. It's very easy to calculate the resistance for the resistor..
R = (5v - U(led)) / I(led)
U(led) depends on the diode. The regular red, green or yellow normally are around 1.7 - 1.8V, while the blue ones can be from 2.5 - 4.5V.
I(led) is the current through the led, and 10 - 15 mA will normally be fine.
If you use I(led) in mA, then R will be in kilo-ohms.
Stig
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That's exactly what I did! The LED's I used (Blue ultrabrights) are just soldered onto the old MB 'plugs, with a bit of heatshrink to stop them shorting. No resistors where used.On 2002-06-12 11:29, Stig wrote:
Hi.
Don't just solder the diodes onto the GPO-pins. Use for instance an old cable from a pc-case (reset switch cable works fine) and solder the diode to that. If you don't want to use resistors along with the diodes, you need diodes with built-in resistors, also called 5v-diodes. The normal is to use a resistor in series with the led. 220 ohms will give you a current of about 15mA for the regular red, green or yellow led.
Stig
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: GreatOldOne on 2002-06-13 05:34 ]</font>
The only display having 12v GPOs, is LK204-25PC, all the other have 5v GPOs (unless there have been any changes lately).
GreatOldOne: If you soldered the diode onto the GPO without a resistor, you probably have a diode meant for 5v (or possibly 4.5v), otherwise you are risking destroying either the diode or the GPO. Most GPOs can only output 20mA.
Edit: Just checked the manual, and there are already current limiting resistors on the GPOs, so you shouldn't need resistors on the diodes, just plug them in....
Stig
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Stig on 2002-06-13 09:02 ]</font>
GreatOldOne: If you soldered the diode onto the GPO without a resistor, you probably have a diode meant for 5v (or possibly 4.5v), otherwise you are risking destroying either the diode or the GPO. Most GPOs can only output 20mA.
Edit: Just checked the manual, and there are already current limiting resistors on the GPOs, so you shouldn't need resistors on the diodes, just plug them in....
Stig
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Stig on 2002-06-13 09:02 ]</font>
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It's not an MO filter - It's just a piece of blue gel sheet (the stuff used in lighting rigs).On 2002-06-13 07:29, tarzan wrote:
btw GreatOldOne, did you use a VFD filter on those pics in the gallery ? or is it a standart VFD2041 ?
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: tarzan on 2002-06-13 07:30 ]</font>
Oh - and it's a VK204-25-V, not a VFD2041