Is it possible to keep an IPS LCD LED display or will they all die? I have handheld consoles with these displays
the same question for class 2 smd ceramic capacitor
the same question for class 2 smd ceramic capacitor
Everything we know will die at some point. The question is therefore not if something will die but when.or will they all die?
Of course the abswer to this question is a prediction based on probability and cannot (at all) be exact for a single case.
LED LCD IPS display suffers a lot of degradation in long-term storage even without use? I have a handheld console with these displays
I have a Gameboy from 34 years ago that works the same as it did on day 1.
I also have an LCD from 2023 that no longer works.
The question is too broad to answer accurately because it depends on the specific part and what the MTBF is.
I also have an LCD from 2023 that no longer works.
The question is too broad to answer accurately because it depends on the specific part and what the MTBF is.
LCD lifespan depends heavily on the quality of the driver circuitry. They also don't like extreme temperatures
LED LCD IPS display suffers a lot of degradation in long-term storage even without use? I have a handheld console with these displays
Heat and moisture are the enemies of the LCD polarizing material. The edge illumination LEDs are not likely degrade. In old displays CFL tubes were used, they can more likely die. So do the HV inverters.
Here, where I live, the temperature varies 32-36C, humidity varies 57-67% on days without rain, is this really bad for the LCD LED IPS display on my devices?
Do you have a source for this revalation? Polaroid material survives for decades in sunglasses, I've never seen a polarizing filter fail in a display.Heat and moisture are the enemies of the LCD polarizing material.
Is it difficult to store the LCD LED IPS display in these climatic conditions for the long term? Are they very sensitive to wear due to humidity and temperature?
This heat effect is called Nematic-to-Isotropic Transition, according to my research on the web. There is also mention of "LCD rot". My personal experience is I dropped an LCD thermometer in the washing machine, and the LCD perimeter got rotten. I think the polaroid sunglasses have the polarizing layer only, the LCD have the liquid electrosensitive polarization twisting layer between thin glasses, plus the plastic polarizing layer. If the twisting of the two is 90° apart, it is blocking light. The liquid in the LCD is some organic material, naturally heat sensitive. The moisture can leak in at the edges.Do you have a source for this revalation? Polaroid material survives for decades in sunglasses, I've never seen a polarizing filter fail in a display.
In my case is critical bad for long storage LCD LED IPS? here home is 32-36C, 60-65%
i stored devices with lcd led ips in cardboardboxes
i stored devices with lcd led ips in cardboardboxes
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