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How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

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    #16
    Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

    Thanks for all the info!!

    Comment


      #17
      Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

      great info thankz tom

      Comment


        #18
        Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

        Good info on this forum for a variety of applications.

        Need some help myself, but have a feeling I'll be back here often between plasmas, audio gear, and pinball machines.

        Comment


          #19
          Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

          Hello Tom66.
          In short time i'm planning to build my own pdp panel driver and really i'm out of knowledge. (very dissapointed about panasonic vt60, theres huge mistakes they didnt want to fix) The problem is: sub-fields and scan line+data line selection.
          1)I don't ungerstand sub-fields at all) are dispaying subfield with "brighness 1" and then with "brightness 3" gives a brightness 4? How dithering works? Whats the order of subfields? One per line, all lines and again, or all per line and then next line?
          2)About line selection: as i see it uses standart signals for making sustain/scan signals, but line selection and data lines for X board are lvds. What format, clock and how many bits it uses?
          What oscillograph freq do i need to watch all signals in pdp, 100mhz is enough?
          I'm very sorry for my bad english, but please help me if it is possible.

          Comment


            #20
            Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

            Originally posted by JackMiles View Post
            Hello Tom66.
            In short time i'm planning to build my own pdp panel driver and really i'm out of knowledge. (very dissapointed about panasonic vt60, theres huge mistakes they didnt want to fix) The problem is: sub-fields and scan line+data line selection.
            1)I don't ungerstand sub-fields at all) are dispaying subfield with "brighness 1" and then with "brightness 3" gives a brightness 4? How dithering works? Whats the order of subfields? One per line, all lines and again, or all per line and then next line?
            2)About line selection: as i see it uses standart signals for making sustain/scan signals, but line selection and data lines for X board are lvds. What format, clock and how many bits it uses?
            What oscillograph freq do i need to watch all signals in pdp, 100mhz is enough?
            I'm very sorry for my bad english, but please help me if it is possible.
            It's an ambitious project, I'll give you that.

            The subfields are basically just same brightness levels but displayed for a longer period of time, so for example a subfield of length 1 might be about 1% as bright as one which is displayed 100 times over, each sustain event emits about the same light.

            The line selection is logic level from control board, ground referenced. At the buffers, it is VFG referenced, that is the sustain node (without the Vsc applied.) This requires optoisolation.

            Driving IGBTs at the required rate (around 200kHz) is a high level power electronics project. I would not be surprised if the first few boards work for some small amount of time before catastrophically failing. For learning experience, I would try experimenting with a different panel... maybe one not so valuable

            A common sustain driver (SS) is a lot less ambitious than the addressed sustain driver.

            Scope: minimum 100MHz digital scope like Rigol DS1074Z, DS2072A, Agilent 2000X, etc. You need the high waveform update rate to see the most detail.
            Please do not PM me with questions! Questions via PM will not be answered. Post on the forums instead!
            Free service manuals: http://www.toms-service-manuals.com/ -- 72 LED/LCD TVs, 5 monitors, 28 plasma TVs, and 2 AVR 6.1 amplifiers fixed! -- I repair Pioneer 9G Plasma Main Boards & KRP-M01 Media Receivers (PM me for info)

            2 Pioneer KURO 9G, 12 Panasonic LCD/Plasma, 1 Sony LCD, 1 NEC Plasma, 2 Yamaha HTS, 5 Sharp LCDs, 5 Toshiba LCDs, 7 Philips Plasma/LCD, 1 Hitachi Plasma, 11 LG LCD/Plasma, 18 Samsung LED/LCD/Plasma, 1 Thomson Plasma, 1 Atec LCD, 1 Hanspree LCD, 1 Xerox LCD, 1 Harwa LCD, 2 Proview LCD, 2 Hyundai LCD, 1 "Onn" LCD, 1 Grundig LCD, 1 Dell LCD, 1 iiyama LCD, 1 Acer LED, 1 Logik LCD, 1 Baird (China) LCD, 6 Bush LCDs, 22 Vestel LCDs (Best->Worst)

            Comment


              #21
              Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

              Originally posted by tom66 View Post
              It's an ambitious project, I'll give you that.

              The subfields are basically just same brightness levels but displayed for a longer period of time, so for example a subfield of length 1 might be about 1% as bright as one which is displayed 100 times over, each sustain event emits about the same light.

              The line selection is logic level from control board, ground referenced. At the buffers, it is VFG referenced, that is the sustain node (without the Vsc applied.) This requires optoisolation.

              Driving IGBTs at the required rate (around 200kHz) is a high level power electronics project. I would not be surprised if the first few boards work for some small amount of time before catastrophically failing. For learning experience, I would try experimenting with a different panel... maybe one not so valuable

              A common sustain driver (SS) is a lot less ambitious than the addressed sustain driver.

              Scope: minimum 100MHz digital scope like Rigol DS1074Z, DS2072A, Agilent 2000X, etc. You need the high waveform update rate to see the most detail.
              "Depending on the display technology, the fields will be in binary lengths (512, 256, 128, 64, 32, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1) which allows any cell to be varied from zero intensity to 1023 intensity (arbitrary figures.)" - that means that they all differs only by quantyty of sustain impulses and displayed one after another, so, if i need "3" i set "1" for cell when "1 impulse", set "1" for cell when its "2 impulses" and set "0" for all others?

              In VT60 manual theres SEL SIU OC1 OC2 and CLK signals for scanline selection. Any idea about them?

              Well, i'll try first to "emulate" real oscilloscope for sus/select and hope my panel will live long enough. I hope)) For experiments will use old 42u30.
              For driving IGBT on SUS and SCAN boards, do i need any optoisolation, or buffers already on board are enough?

              Any idea about X-board lvds ?

              Is Rigol DS1102D is ok ?

              Thank you.

              Comment


                #22
                Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                By the way, Tom, do you know the source of panasonic line bleeding and flicker problem?
                Line bleeding is a current leak in panel itself, IGBT scheme or image processing itself?

                Comment


                  #23
                  Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                  Line bleed is caused by finite nonzero resistance of the scan driver ICs and panel electrodes. Fundamental limitation of plasmas. You can get it with LCDs too on certain very high contrast images or with certain patterns.

                  The scan drivers are shift registers, have nothing to do with the image though, they just select which line to load one after another.

                  SEL = choose even/odd line
                  SIU = serial data input
                  OC1 = enable set 1
                  OC2 = enable set 2
                  CLK = serial data clock
                  (just guesses)

                  Glad you have a "spare" TV lying around. the SUS do not need isolation, the SCAN do, for the PASS-FET output (this blocks SUS from shorting the ramp waveforms which would be destructive.)

                  Perhaps try replicating as much of the SC board as possible (full schem available for U30, I think) then try changing it for your preferences.

                  DS1102D doesn't have a phosphor display so is pushing the capabilities of such an instrument.
                  Last edited by tom66; 03-04-2014, 12:53 PM.
                  Please do not PM me with questions! Questions via PM will not be answered. Post on the forums instead!
                  Free service manuals: http://www.toms-service-manuals.com/ -- 72 LED/LCD TVs, 5 monitors, 28 plasma TVs, and 2 AVR 6.1 amplifiers fixed! -- I repair Pioneer 9G Plasma Main Boards & KRP-M01 Media Receivers (PM me for info)

                  2 Pioneer KURO 9G, 12 Panasonic LCD/Plasma, 1 Sony LCD, 1 NEC Plasma, 2 Yamaha HTS, 5 Sharp LCDs, 5 Toshiba LCDs, 7 Philips Plasma/LCD, 1 Hitachi Plasma, 11 LG LCD/Plasma, 18 Samsung LED/LCD/Plasma, 1 Thomson Plasma, 1 Atec LCD, 1 Hanspree LCD, 1 Xerox LCD, 1 Harwa LCD, 2 Proview LCD, 2 Hyundai LCD, 1 "Onn" LCD, 1 Grundig LCD, 1 Dell LCD, 1 iiyama LCD, 1 Acer LED, 1 Logik LCD, 1 Baird (China) LCD, 6 Bush LCDs, 22 Vestel LCDs (Best->Worst)

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                    Thanks for this thread guys.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                      A cut & paste to a document for me.
                      Much thanks.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                        I can Say Only Wow

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                          I Can Only Say WOW

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                            Tom,
                            Very nice treatise on PDP and driver.

                            I always thought of PDP as millions of fluorescent tubes on end. I think about ways these can fail (kind of a pessimist, I suppose) and envision how lighting tubes turn black at the ends. This increases load on the ballasts which not only will be the failure of the tube but soon, the end for the ballasts.

                            Is this in any way analogous to PDPs? Or does such carbonization not happen in the PDP cells?

                            Thanks again for sharing your knowledge.

                            Cheers.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                              Originally posted by jojo88 View Post
                              Tom,
                              Very nice treatise on PDP and driver.

                              I always thought of PDP as millions of fluorescent tubes on end. I think about ways these can fail (kind of a pessimist, I suppose) and envision how lighting tubes turn black at the ends. This increases load on the ballasts which not only will be the failure of the tube but soon, the end for the ballasts.

                              Is this in any way analogous to PDPs? Or does such carbonization not happen in the PDP cells?

                              Thanks again for sharing your knowledge.

                              Cheers.
                              A similar mechanism called ion implantation can happen.

                              The PDP experiences very high energy discharges within the cell, which causes damage to the MgO structure of the cell. This damage must be compensated by adjusting the drive waveform as the panel ages, generally requiring a higher priming energy.

                              Manufacturers sometimes get this wrong, a good example being the LG PC1D series where the priming algorithm appears to overcompensate leading to sparkling pixels across the panel.

                              Pioneer's KURO 9G also has a minor issue with degradation, but it can be compensated for by adjusting the voltages for older panels. Mine has 15,000 hours, and the only issue is a small amount of red mist at the bottom of the panel on pitch black scenes. I could probably get rid of that but it's not visible on anything but pitch black images so it doesn't really bother me.
                              Please do not PM me with questions! Questions via PM will not be answered. Post on the forums instead!
                              Free service manuals: http://www.toms-service-manuals.com/ -- 72 LED/LCD TVs, 5 monitors, 28 plasma TVs, and 2 AVR 6.1 amplifiers fixed! -- I repair Pioneer 9G Plasma Main Boards & KRP-M01 Media Receivers (PM me for info)

                              2 Pioneer KURO 9G, 12 Panasonic LCD/Plasma, 1 Sony LCD, 1 NEC Plasma, 2 Yamaha HTS, 5 Sharp LCDs, 5 Toshiba LCDs, 7 Philips Plasma/LCD, 1 Hitachi Plasma, 11 LG LCD/Plasma, 18 Samsung LED/LCD/Plasma, 1 Thomson Plasma, 1 Atec LCD, 1 Hanspree LCD, 1 Xerox LCD, 1 Harwa LCD, 2 Proview LCD, 2 Hyundai LCD, 1 "Onn" LCD, 1 Grundig LCD, 1 Dell LCD, 1 iiyama LCD, 1 Acer LED, 1 Logik LCD, 1 Baird (China) LCD, 6 Bush LCDs, 22 Vestel LCDs (Best->Worst)

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Re: How a plasma display panel (PDP) works

                                Originally posted by tom66 View Post
                                A similar mechanism called ion implantation can happen.

                                The PDP experiences very high energy discharges within the cell, which causes damage to the MgO structure of the cell. This damage must be compensated by adjusting the drive waveform as the panel ages, generally requiring a higher priming energy.

                                Manufacturers sometimes get this wrong, a good example being the LG PC1D series where the priming algorithm appears to overcompensate leading to sparkling pixels across the panel.

                                Pioneer's KURO 9G also has a minor issue with degradation, but it can be compensated for by adjusting the voltages for older panels. Mine has 15,000 hours, and the only issue is a small amount of red mist at the bottom of the panel on pitch black scenes. I could probably get rid of that but it's not visible on anything but pitch black images so it doesn't really bother me.

                                I just happened to notice this thread. Interesting subject as when I tried for my first time to repair my LG 60PA6500, and just about had it fixed until I had a rookie blunder and ran it to check for power going to the lower address buffers without the metal cover, (I thought), cooked the ICs. Obviously it was a heat sink! I regret being a dumb ass often!
                                My question is, would running a PDP on lower power settings in the picture quality menu help a PDP live longer? I usually run it on a medium setting and the panel is barely warm. On a high quality setting it gets toasty.
                                BTW Tom, many thanks again on your advice last year!
                                From my favoritest movie ever!:
                                Cledus Snow: Can I ask you a question?
                                Bo Darville: Sure, ask me what?
                                Cleedus: What the Hell do we want to go to Texas for and haul beer back here? What is that?
                                Bo: For the good old American life. For the money, the glory, and the fun. Mostly for the money.

                                Comment

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