improving n64 contrast with psone lcd
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improving n64 contrast with psone lcd
Bens trick of shorting out the resistor on the psone lcd is good, but as some mentioned,
the contrast suffers slightly, so why not wire the leds directly to the battery, using a resistor of a different value if you connect to higher than 5v?
This would leave the contrast alone wouldn't it?
What do you think?
the contrast suffers slightly, so why not wire the leds directly to the battery, using a resistor of a different value if you connect to higher than 5v?
This would leave the contrast alone wouldn't it?
What do you think?
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nos_slived
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Re: improving n64 contrast with psone lcd
It wouldn't make a difference, because you would need a higher resistance, and your LEDs wouldn't get brighter.sbf wrote:Bens trick of shorting out the resistor on the psone lcd is good, but as some mentioned,
the contrast suffers slightly, so why not wire the leds directly to the battery, using a resistor of a different value if you connect to higher than 5v?

but doesn't shorting r23 affect the contrast?
Wiring the leds separate of the psone lcd would mean that you wouldn't have to short out resistor r23 to make them brighter, therefore leaving the contrast untouched.
The leds would have the same brightness, but we wouldn't be touching the resistor affecting the contrast.
Wiring the leds separate of the psone lcd would mean that you wouldn't have to short out resistor r23 to make them brighter, therefore leaving the contrast untouched.
The leds would have the same brightness, but we wouldn't be touching the resistor affecting the contrast.
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nos_slived
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nos_slived
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well maybe shorting r23 makes the chip controlling it adjust the contrast, and a side effect is the leds get more current,
Maybe a way to test this is to wire the leds separate of the circuit, and try the psone screen with, and without the r23 short, seeing if the contrast does change.
as *o* was saying, we need to be able to adjust the contrast,
I'll have a look later to see if I can get any pinout data on the chips, we might be able to put a variable resistor in place of a fixed one somewhere.
Maybe a way to test this is to wire the leds separate of the circuit, and try the psone screen with, and without the r23 short, seeing if the contrast does change.
as *o* was saying, we need to be able to adjust the contrast,
I'll have a look later to see if I can get any pinout data on the chips, we might be able to put a variable resistor in place of a fixed one somewhere.
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superdeformed
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The brightness mod does absolutely nothing to the amount of current or power supplied to the LEDs (or the ccfl tube). It makes it so the LCD gets a little more juice and therefor lets more light through (which is why the contrast gets shot to hell).sbf wrote:well maybe shorting r23 makes the chip controlling it adjust the contrast, and a side effect is the leds get more current,
Maybe a way to test this is to wire the leds separate of the circuit, and try the psone screen with, and without the r23 short, seeing if the contrast does change.
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nos_slived
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