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  3. Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?

Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?

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  • Nca78N Nca78

    @neverdie said in Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?:

    @nca78
    I'd be interested in any projects with schematics that you're willing to share. :)

    I have nearly finished the test board, a bit messy but at least I'll have tested many components before they rot in my drawers :D I'm sure you'll be interested in at least of few of the others things on this board.

    0_1527530973930_8be70dfd-bffe-42ee-a61f-cb2ff256980e-image.png

    NeverDieN Offline
    NeverDieN Offline
    NeverDie
    Hero Member
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    @nca78 Great! You're really good at this. :)

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    • Nca78N Offline
      Nca78N Offline
      Nca78
      Hardware Contributor
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      LCD driver is soldered and responding on I2C bus, now I need to make a lib to display something as there's none available, interesting challenge :D

      0_1529410093535_IMG_20180619_183101.jpg

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      • Nca78N Offline
        Nca78N Offline
        Nca78
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        By the way I realized there are others drivers from Microchip with even lower power consumption, like PCF8551: at 3.3V <0.6uA supply current for the IC and down to 2.5uA supply for the LCD, it would mean an always on LCD below 5uA. Added to cart but it will take time before I place order and even longer before I have a PCB to test it...

        NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
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        • Nca78N Nca78

          By the way I realized there are others drivers from Microchip with even lower power consumption, like PCF8551: at 3.3V <0.6uA supply current for the IC and down to 2.5uA supply for the LCD, it would mean an always on LCD below 5uA. Added to cart but it will take time before I place order and even longer before I have a PCB to test it...

          NeverDieN Offline
          NeverDieN Offline
          NeverDie
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          @nca78 said in Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?:

          By the way I realized there are others drivers from Microchip with even lower power consumption, like PCF8551: at 3.3V <0.6uA supply current for the IC and down to 2.5uA supply for the LCD, it would mean an always on LCD below 5uA. Added to cart but it will take time before I place order and even longer before I have a PCB to test it...

          Sounds like a winner!

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          • Nca78N Offline
            Nca78N Offline
            Nca78
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            So I made a first test with the embryo of my library, and I realize:

            • the soldering was not so good in the end, ic is not perfectly aligned and there are 2 segments connected together. And much worse CLK pin was somehow shorted to VDD meaning the clock was "locked" and display not refreshed (it was only varying voltage once when I sent new data, pretty bad...)
            • I have to be more careful when applying rules from datasheet, as pullups on the I2C have too high values and it makes the driver use much more current than expected. I made test quickly with a uno so at 5V supply which is obviously not great, with 10K pullups on the board + 50k pullups on the uno power consumption is 120uA. Without the 10K pullups on the board it goes up to 180uA. And if I disconnect the SDA/SCL lines it goes up a bit over 200uA. So it seems driver is wasting energy driving those pins high. I will solder lower values pullups tomorrow (respecting rules from datasheet this time :) ), use a 3.3V arduino and and see if it goes better.
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            • Nca78N Offline
              Nca78N Offline
              Nca78
              Hardware Contributor
              wrote on last edited by Nca78
              #19

              So finally I made a new board with my spare PCF85176, still with a 5V uno and it's much better. This is the measurement for the full board: driver, LCD and MCP1703 that generates the 3V VLCD.
              I2C lines of the driver are 5V tolerant so I rewired my board to power the driver through the MCP1703. But it seems it's leaching power from the (still at 5V) I2C lines as measurement falls to 1uA :)
              Anyway the contrast is very good as you can see on the picture, and I'm also happy with the design of my "sensor test board", not perfect but flexible enough to test different combinations of voltage sources.

              0_1529853674073_IMG_20180624_215411.jpg

              matheus galvaoM 1 Reply Last reply
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              • NeverDieN Offline
                NeverDieN Offline
                NeverDie
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                This one claims to be 80ua: https://www.buydisplay.com/default/2-2-inch-122x32-lcd-display-module-graphic-sed1520

                Nca78N 1 Reply Last reply
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                • NeverDieN NeverDie

                  This one claims to be 80ua: https://www.buydisplay.com/default/2-2-inch-122x32-lcd-display-module-graphic-sed1520

                  Nca78N Offline
                  Nca78N Offline
                  Nca78
                  Hardware Contributor
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  @neverdie said in Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?:

                  This one claims to be 80ua: https://www.buydisplay.com/default/2-2-inch-122x32-lcd-display-module-graphic-sed1520

                  Interesting, there are a bunch of sellers when searching for the SED1520 controller. I guess it's a SED1520 clone and not the original, which seems like a very old model if I judge by the retro style of the datasheet :)
                  https://www.lcd-module.de/eng/pdf/zubehoer/s_1520.pdf

                  The only problem is it's a parallel interface, so it will need a lot of free pins.

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                  • mfalkviddM Offline
                    mfalkviddM Offline
                    mfalkvidd
                    Mod
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    Thanks to a computer magazine, which wrote about https://github.com/joeycastillo/The-Open-Book I was made aware of a source for e-ink / e-paper displays:

                    https://zh-tw.buyepaper.com/c/e-ink-display-0371

                    Pricing looks ok and that have many different sizes

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                    • Nca78N Nca78

                      So finally I made a new board with my spare PCF85176, still with a 5V uno and it's much better. This is the measurement for the full board: driver, LCD and MCP1703 that generates the 3V VLCD.
                      I2C lines of the driver are 5V tolerant so I rewired my board to power the driver through the MCP1703. But it seems it's leaching power from the (still at 5V) I2C lines as measurement falls to 1uA :)
                      Anyway the contrast is very good as you can see on the picture, and I'm also happy with the design of my "sensor test board", not perfect but flexible enough to test different combinations of voltage sources.

                      0_1529853674073_IMG_20180624_215411.jpg

                      matheus galvaoM Offline
                      matheus galvaoM Offline
                      matheus galvao
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      @Nca78 I trying to use the GYTN-2490 display the same I intend to use with the PCF855 controller, how did you manage to show the values in the photo? which MCU do you use? I use PIC18f

                      https://ibb.co/album/QX1sSS

                      Nca78N 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • matheus galvaoM matheus galvao

                        @Nca78 I trying to use the GYTN-2490 display the same I intend to use with the PCF855 controller, how did you manage to show the values in the photo? which MCU do you use? I use PIC18f

                        https://ibb.co/album/QX1sSS

                        Nca78N Offline
                        Nca78N Offline
                        Nca78
                        Hardware Contributor
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #24

                        @matheus-galvao said in Best options for a low current display for a battery operated node?:

                        GYTN-2490

                        Hello, I didn't do much for this one, I just used an existing PCF8576 arduino library. Are you using this exact same LCD driver, or another one ? They are not very difficult to make libraries for, I made a library for PCA9553 (much lower power) and it was easy, the annoying part is sometimes to convert the digits to "raw" data sent to the LCD driver when LCD driver designers and lcd manufacturer didn't have the same idea for segment mapping :)

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