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Blog RIoTboard: Building a TFT LCD Display and Digitizer - Part 1: Introduction
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  • Author Author: shabaz
  • Date Created: 9 Jul 2014 2:44 AM Date Created
  • Views 4010 views
  • Likes 4 likes
  • Comments 19 comments
  • lcd
  • ioe
  • internet_of_everything
  • lvds
  • tft
  • internet_of_things
  • riotboard
  • digitizer
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RIoTboard: Building a TFT LCD Display and Digitizer - Part 1: Introduction

shabaz
shabaz
9 Jul 2014

Part 1: Introduction

(Click here for Part 2).

Thanks so much to doctorcdf and nlarson at element14 for always inspiring me and others, I was very proud to receive two free RIoTboards for a couple of projects. The RIoTboardRIoTboard is one of the latest very low cost single board computers (SBC) with a decent processor capable of running Android or Linux.

 

This first project is to connect it up to a Thin Film Transistor (TFT) LCD display as found on old laptops, with a view to eventually converting it all into a microscope viewer. The RIoTboad has two video output options; HDMI video output for connecting to a TV or monitor, and an interface with low-voltage differential signalling (LVDS) for connecting to TFT LCD panels (i.e. laptop LCD panels!).

 

When I received the RIoTboard, I immediately plugged it into a TV using the HDMI video connector, an Ethernet connector into my router, and then powered up the board. It straight away displayed the Android startup screen and was instantly usable. I was browsing the web immediately, and BBC news website and videos played out-of-the-box. Android runs quite fast on the RIoTboard.

 

After some discussions with the amazing all-round Guru/Oracle (agrahambell ) it was clear the RIoTboard should in theory work with many old laptop LCD displays, and so this project was conceived.

 

For those not wishing to construct their own, there is a pre-built display available that is designed for the RIoTboard. The project described here takes quite some effort (not hard, just some time/patience) and is likely to be no cheaper than a pre-built display. Nevertheless the build-it-yourself approach is documented here. The resultant image quality is good. A 1024x768 display was used, here is a photo of a video being played:

image

 

Here is an example video, showing general snappiness of response and high video quality. Video output was smooth in real life:

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This is what the mock-up looks like! It's not pretty. It is supported by wood and adhesive tape. I just taped the RIoTboard and other parts onto the back of the LCD panel (using the yellow card that you can see for insulation), for verifying functionality. Eventually it will be disassembled and fitted in a nice case. The wood supports and tape are just for testing purposes so that I can access both sides.

image

Here it is from the front, displaying an Android home screen. The coke can is for size comparison:

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Another video - I think it would make a great music and video player:

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Full construction details and circuit diagrams will be in the next post (in the next day or so [part 2 now available by clicking here]). In the meantime, this is what the RIoTboard looks like, it is about half the size of a compact disk case. It is about 120x75mm.

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Top Comments

  • Former Member
    Former Member over 11 years ago +2
    and I think it looks fine on it's wooden stand, stuck together with double sided sticky tape in the best Blue Peter tradition
  • Problemchild
    Problemchild over 11 years ago +2
    Laser cutting of case to follow shortly then Shabaz! !
  • bwelsby
    bwelsby over 11 years ago +1
    Great project, I have a stack of old laptops waiting for something like this. I will get stuck in when I get back from holiday.
  • Problemchild
    Problemchild over 11 years ago

    Laser cutting of case to follow shortly then Shabaz! !  

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 11 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Only real troubleshooting I can think of would be if the display timings were different, but the impression I get is that because it's this jeida standard then all the 1024x768 panels will be similar enough. If you'd had a different resolution panel then that side of it could have been more interesting as the Android/Ubuntu images appear to be setup for the LCD8000-97C.. which just happens to be 1024x768..

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  • shabaz
    shabaz over 11 years ago in reply to mcb1

    Hi Mark,

     

    Thanks!!  I thought this project would need loads of troubleshooting. After it was built, it remained powered off for a week. It kept looking at me. Then I tried it yesterday and worked first time. So in summary this project was definitely easier than expected!

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 11 years ago

    Great project, well done.

     

    Mark

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 11 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Not sure exactly what the connector on the back of the panel is, bit it's very thin.  Luckily I have the cable assembly and inverter that came with the panel, so I'm just going to cut off the plug from the other end and use it as-is. Will probably be a lot of heatshrink involved in that image

     

    Only thing I'll remind everyone about is that if you use my 3.15 kernel, or mainline 3.16-rc* onwards then you cannot use the i2c pins on the mini-hdmi.  One of them is being re-purposed for the ethernet interrupt by default. There are ways around that, but it requires an altered devicetree and if you want reliable ethernet also some kernel command line changes.

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