GorbaDisplay

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Project GorbaDisplay
Gorba-type.jpg
Public transport LED display
Status Initializing
Contact bertrik, User:Eloy
Last Update 2023-08-16

Introduction

This project is about reverse engineering a former public transport LED display. It consists of 4 panels of each 32 * 16 LEDs.

The plan is to make the display fully addressable as a bitmap display over a network connection, preferably with individually controllable brightness per pixel.

Hardware

14-pin header + chips

This thing consists of two main parts:

  • a control board, with logic to receive (for example) text messages over a serial connection and convert them to a bitmap display on the display board
  • a display board, with logic to light up each LED, consisting of 4 panels of 16x16 LEDs each

It has a light sensor to sense the ambient light level.

Each panel appears to work almost independently: it has its own power supply circuit, receiving input through a 14-pin connector and forwarding data to the next panel using another 14-pin connector. Each panel receives 24V and contains an LM2678 chip, also known as the Texas instruments "simple switcher", to drop the voltage down to approximately 2.2V.

Each display panel contains the following integrated cicruits:

  • 74HC541, an octal buffer/line driver, buffers most of the signals coming in from the 14-pin connector to the rest of the electronics on the panel
  • 74HC238, a 3-to-8 line decoder/demultiplexer, probably selects which row is currently being lit up
  • group of 4x IRF7425, power MOSFET, probably for driving a 1-out-of-4 row of LEDs
  • a whole bunch of TPIC6C596, 8-bit shift register, probably drives the columns inside one row of LEDs
  • LMC6482, dual opamp, probably used to interface with the light sensor / LDR

Each LED has a 10 ohm resistor in series. LEDs are amber/orange.

Theory of operation

This is a row-multiplexed display, during each phase it lights up 1/4th of its rows. By quickly lighting up each row in succession, the illusion to a human observer is that all LEDs are controlled simultaneously.

Each 32x16 panel contains 512 LEDs and 16x8-bit shift registers.

row demultiplexer

The row demultiplexer receives 3 bits input. The lower two bits are used to select which row (out of 4) to light up. The highest bit is used an enable bit for the row multiplexer.

column registers

Each panel contains 32x16 pixels. It has a shift register consisting of 16 TPIC6C596 circuits organised in 4 rows of each 32 pixels. The shift registers of one panel are wired up in series. At the end of the shift register chain of each panel, there is another 596 chip, the output feeds into the data pin of the output 14-pin connector.

14-pin connector

Connections for the pinout are:

Connections
Pin Id Wemos D1 mini Remark
1 VCC - Power
2 VCC - Power
3 ROW_SEL0 D1 74HCT541:A3-Y3 -> 74HCT238:A0, 0 = active
4 ROW_SEL1 D2 74HCT541:A2-Y2 -> 74HCT238:A1, 0 = active
5 ROW_SEL2 D3 74HCT541:A1-Y1 -> 74HCT238:A2, acts as a disable for the row multiplexer
6 ? - 74HCT541:A0-Y0 -> ?
7 ? -
8 ? -
9 COL_DATA D5 596:SER_IN
10 COL_ENABLE D6 74HCT541:A4-Y4 -> 596:G, 0 = active, 1 = inactive
11 COL_CLOCK D7 74HCT541:A5-Y5 -> 596:SRCK
12 COL_LATCH D8 75HCT541:A6-Y6 -> 596:RCK
13 GND GND Ground
14 GND - Ground

Software

Repository: https://github.com/bertrik/GorbaDisplay

This is able to control one panel of 32x16 pixels using an ESP8266 (wemos d1 mini).

Nice looking font for use on one panel: https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/2168506/4x6-font-6 Digits are 4 pixels wide, so should be able to fit an ip address on one panel (on two rows).