REPAIRING AND NOT THROWING AWAY

Richtige Fernseher haben Röhren!

Richtige Fernseher haben Röhren!

In Brief: On this site you will find pictures and technical information about Service Modes, Circuit Diagrams, Firmware Update procedure, Disassemble procedure, Universal remote control set-up codes, Troubleshooting and more....

If you go into the profession, you will obtain or have access to a variety of tech tips databases HERE IT IS Master Electronics Repair !.

These are an excellent investment where the saying: 'time-is-money' rules. However, to learn, you need to develop a general troubleshooting approach - a logical, methodical, method of narrowing down the problem. A tech tip database might suggest: 'Replace C536' for a particular symptom. This is good advice for a specific problem on one model. However, what you really want to understand is why C536 was the cause and how to pinpoint the culprit in general even if you don't have a service manual or schematic and your tech tip database doesn't have an entry for your sick TV or VCR.

While schematics are nice, you won't always have them or be able to justify the purchase for a one-of repair. Therefore, in many cases, some reverse engineering will be necessary. The time will be well spent since even if you don't see another instance of the same model in your entire lifetime, you will have learned something in the process that can be applied to other equipment problems.
As always, when you get stuck, checking out a tech-tips database may quickly identify your problem and solution.In that case, you can greatly simplify your troubleshooting or at least confirm a diagnosis before ordering parts.

Happy repairing!
Today, the West is headed for the abyss. For the ultimate fate of our disposable society is for that society itself to be disposed of. And this will happen sooner, rather than later.

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..............The bitterness of poor quality is remembered long after the sweetness of todays funny gadgets low price has faded from memory........ . . . . . .....
Don't forget the past, the end of the world is upon us! Pretty soon it will all turn to dust!

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Wednesday 27 February 2019

INVENTION HISTORY OF LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY (LCD)

Invention History of Liquid Crystal Display (LCD)

The history and development of the Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) is rather complex. The story of the LCD had an unusual beginning by an Austrian botanist in the 19th century. Though the LCD made a different and unstable start, its development proceeded from early successes like the pocket calculator to the key milestone of a flat panel television display that can be hung on a wall. The origin and development of the LCD spans the world’s major industrial centers including the US, Japan and Europe.

Liquid Crystals – Discovery

Liquid crystals were first observed by an Austrian botanist, Friedrich Reinitzer, in the year 1888. He discovered a strange material that exhibited a mesophase between the solid state and liquid state. At a temperature of 145 degree Celsius, it melted, probably becoming white and viscous. When he increased the temperature to 179 degree Celsius, it became isotropic and clear. The material discovered by him was cholesteryl benzoate. Regarding this, he wrote a letter to Otto Lehmann, professor of Physics at the Technical University Karlsruhe of Germany on 14th of March, 1889. In the letter, he had written in detail about the two melting points. Lehmann studied the material comprehensively and discovered that the liquid at the mesophase was found to exhibit a double refraction effect, which is a characteristic of a crystal. As the material had the characteristics of both liquid and crystal, Lehmann named it “fliessende krystalle” and the English equivalent name “liquid crystal” was ultimately born.

The Then-unpopular Liquid Crystals

These liquid crystals were not popular among the scientists and researchers in the early 20th century; in fact, the material remained an element of scientific curiosity for nearly 80 long years. Here, it should be mentioned that E. Merck of Darmstadt, Germany sold liquid crystals as early as 1907 for analytical purposes. Even in the early 1960s, only a few institutions and corporations were involved in research on these liquid crystals. The conditions for designing liquid crystals with particular physical properties hardly existed and naturally, no one was motivated to use these in a commercial product. Eventually, liquid crystals remained unknown to the common man.

The Early Breakthrough – Williams Domain

The development of LCDs began at the RCA Laboratories in Princeton, New Jersey. In the year 1962, an RCA researcher Richard Williams discovered that liquid crystals exhibited some interesting electro-optic characteristics. Williams generated stripe patterns in a thin layer of liquid crystal material by applying voltage. The pattern produced consisted of long parallel regions which he referred to as “domains.”
Williams concluded that the domains were generated due to ordering the liquid of a kind that had previously not been recognized. He demonstrated the possibility of liquid crystals as electro-optical elements for display devices. This, indeed, was a forerunner of the LCD. The phenomenon discovered by Williams is now referred to as the “Williams domain.”

The Major Breakthrough in the LCD Technology – The Role of George H Heilmeier

In the year 1961, George H. Heilmeier was a young talent who had just completed his written and oral examination for the Ph.D. degree at the Princeton University. RCA Laboratories sponsored his studies. In fact, in those days, there was a big demand for young engineers and scientists. RCA Laboratories recruited and encouraged the best talents and financed their graduate education simultaneously enabling them to work part time at their laboratory on sensible research projects. In the first two years, Heilmeier worked in the then emerging field of solid state microwave devices. Nevertheless, being an ambitious and passionate young scientist, he was in a dilemma whether he should stay in the well established solid state microwave field or enter the more interesting and risky field of organic semiconductors. It was around that time that Heilmeier was pulled towards the experiments on the Williams domain.

Guest-Host Mode

Heilmeier worked sincerely on the Williams domain and after great efforts, he proposed the guest-host mode. The device was drawing a small amount of electric current, less than a microwatt of power per square centimeter and it was capable of switching color with voltages substantially smaller than those of the CRTs, that is, less than 10 V for liquid crystal dye mixture versus more than 1000 V for CRTs!! This was demonstrated in the fall of 1964. Heilmeier predicted that a wall sized flat panel color television was just round the corner. However, it took about a quarter century for his thought to be realized.
When Heilmeier showcased this effect within the lab, the people there became really excited. Vladimir Zworkin, the father of television, heard about the experiment and called Heilmeier to his office to know why people in the RCA were so excited. Heilmeier elaborated on how he had “stumbled” onto the guest-host color switching effect. Zworkin made a remarkable reply: “Stumbled perhaps, but to stumble, one must be moving.” In 1982, the guest-host mode combined with an AM drive was used in a wristwatch television!!
The Successful Dynamic Scattering Mode
Despite a lot of appreciations, there were several problems with the guest-host effect. The dyes used and their liquid crystal hosts did not remain stable for long periods of time in applied fields; besides, the effect was sensitive to surface orientation effects and needed heating to maintain the host in its nematic phase. Scientists at the RCA tried solving these problems in all ways possible.
It was in late 1964 that they observed an interesting effect in several classes of nematic liquid crystals, those with n-type. The materials that gave the best performance were found to be the members of a class of organic compounds called Schiff’s bases. They found the compound anisylidene para-aminophenylacetate (APAPA) to be of specific interest. Its nematic range was from 83 to 100 degree Celsius. In an applied field, these materials seemed to exhibit a remarkable turbulence that they turned milky white from transparent white. Perhaps, the milk white appearance did not require any polarizer to observe; it was merely a light scattering effect.
Heilmeier found a very efficient way to control the reflection of light by electronic means. The rise time of 1-5 ms and decay times of less than 30 ms together with DC operating voltages in the 10-100 V range made the new mode quite attractive for applications like alphanumeric indicators. He was able to demonstrate reflective contrast ratios of better than 15 to 1 with efficiencies of 45 % of the standard white. He referred to this phenomenon as DSM; With DSM as the basis, he achieved the first operational liquid crystal display. This was, in fact, the first demonstration to show that the so-called vague materials called liquid crystals could be made into something useful. And, voila! The LCD was born!!
Heilmeier was inducted in the National Inventors Hall of Fame and was credited with the invention of LCD or the Liquid Crystal Display.
In May 1968, RCA held a press conference and announced the proud discovery of a completely new type of electronic display which was significantly different from the traditional CRTs. The new display was lightweight, consumed very little electrical power and was slim and sleek. The conference captured the attention of industrial and scientific communities across the globe. This announcement led to the development of digital watches in the US, Japan, and Germany as well as the work on pocket calculators in Japan. At the same point of time, it also led to further research work in Switzerland, the UK and Germany, specifically, for the production of new liquid crystal materials that would be appropriate for use in various display applications.

Drawbacks of Heilmeier’s LCD

As mentioned earlier, LCD developed by Heilmeier employed what he called DSM wherein an electrical charge is applied that rearranges the molecules resulting in scattering of light. This DSM design performed poorly and seemed to be too power hungry; eventually, this design was replaced by a much improved version invented by James Fergason in the year 1969.

Improved Version of LCD by James Fergason

James Fergason, an Associate Director at the Kent State University’s Liquid Crystal Institute, was creating a liquid-crystal-based breast cancer screening apparatus in the 1960s. It was during this time that he made the discovery that formed the basis of his best invention. As we know, the liquid crystal displays developed in RCA labs applied voltage in dynamic scattering mode; it consumed much power with meager results. In 1969, Fergason utilized his “twisted nematic field effect” discovery of liquid crystals to channel the current through the crystals effectively, ultimately resulting in displays that provided excellent contrast and long life on minimal power.
Twisted nematic liquid crystal displays were unquestionably superior to the earlier dynamic scattering displays, and soon became popular. The technology was patented in the United States by Fergason in the year 1971. Fergason formed his own company, ILIXCO or International Liquid Crystal Company, in 1968 to manufacture liquid crystal displays. His first customers were the Bulova Watch Company and Gruen Watch Company which employed the technology to market the first LCD watches that used this technology. By the end of the decade, most of the world’s digital watches employed this kind of LCD display.
LCD has seen tremendous development year after year and the annual sales of television with LCD screens are exceeding year after year and with the more and more use of the LCDs, the CRT almost became obsolescent for most purposes.


 Stands for "Liquid Crystal Display." LCD is a flat panel display technology commonly used in TVs and computer monitors. It is also used in screens for mobile devices, such as laptops, tablets, and smartphones.
LCD displays don't just look different than bulky CRT monitors, the way they operate is significantly different as well. Instead of firing electrons at a glass screen, an LCD has backlight that provides light to individual pixels arranged in a rectangular grid. Each pixel has a red, green, and blue RGB sub-pixel that can be turned on or off. When all of a pixel's sub-pixels are turned off, it appears black. When all the sub-pixels are turned on 100%, it appears white. By adjusting the individual levels of red, green, and blue light, millions of color combinations are possible.


How an LCD works:
The backlight in liquid crystal display provides an even light source behind the screen. This light is polarized, meaning only half of the light shines through to the liquid crystal layer. The liquid crystals are made up of a part solid, part liquid substance that can be "twisted" by applying electrical voltage to them. They block the polarized light when they are off, but reflect red, green, or blue light when activated.
Each LCD screen contains a matrix of pixels that display the image on the screen. Early LCDs had passive-matrix screens, which controlled individual pixels by sending a charge to their row and column. Since a limited number of electrical charges could be sent each second, passive-matrix screens were known for appearing blurry when images moved quickly on the screen. Modern LCDs typically use active-matrix technology, which contain thin film transistors, or TFTs. These transistors include capacitors that enable individual pixels to "actively" retain their charge. Therefore, active-matrix LCDs are more efficient and appear more responsive than passive-matrix displays.
NOTE: An LCD's backlight may either be a traditional bulb or LED light. An "LED display" is simply an LCD screen with an LED backlight. This is different than an OLED display, which lights up individual LEDs for each pixel. While the liquid crystals block most of an LCD's backlight when they are off, some of the light may still shine through (which might be noticeable in a dark room). Therefore OLEDs typically have darker black levels than LCDs.