Difference between revisions of "LichtKrant"

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(Hardware modifications)
(Introduction)
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* replace the controller board with an ESP, so we can receive image/text updates over the network -> DONE
 
* replace the controller board with an ESP, so we can receive image/text updates over the network -> DONE
 
* implement more colour depth, so we can display gradient bitmaps (not just red, green, orange) -> DONE
 
* implement more colour depth, so we can display gradient bitmaps (not just red, green, orange) -> DONE
* write software for this, so other people can do the same for their display -> IN PROGRESS
+
* write software for this, so other people can do the same for their display -> DONE
  
 
Next:
 
Next:
* pixelflut server, as described [https://cccgoe.de/wiki/Pixelflut here], just skip the blue channel
+
* <strike>pixelflut server, as described [https://cccgoe.de/wiki/Pixelflut here], just skip the blue channel</strike> pixelflut is a shitty protocol, let's skip that
* getting it to work on a network, see if it impacts performance, visual quality
+
* put everything back in the case and test run it in the target environment (hacker space)
 
 
Future ideas:
 
* generic receiver process for image frames (80x7 RGB, in UDP or TCP/IP)
 
* replicate the existing 80x8 display at revspace, but with one less row and no blue LEDs
 
* double buffering, or some other kind of sync mechanism/callback?
 
  
 
== Reverse engineering ==
 
== Reverse engineering ==

Revision as of 10:17, 31 December 2019

Project LichtKrant
Movingledsign.jpg
Controller for 3-colour 80x7 pixel moving LED sign
Status In progress
Contact bertrik
Last Update 2019-12-31

Introduction

Found a moving LED sign on the revspace free stuff table.

It is 80 pixels wide, 7 pixels high. Each pixel has two sub-pixels (red and green), so it can display 3 colours (off, red, orange, green)

Goals:

  • reverse engineer the electronics and document how it works -> DONE
  • replace the controller board with an ESP, so we can receive image/text updates over the network -> DONE
  • implement more colour depth, so we can display gradient bitmaps (not just red, green, orange) -> DONE
  • write software for this, so other people can do the same for their display -> DONE

Next:

  • pixelflut server, as described here, just skip the blue channel pixelflut is a shitty protocol, let's skip that
  • put everything back in the case and test run it in the target environment (hacker space)

Reverse engineering

lichtkrantconnector

It consists of a processor board and a LED board.

Processor board

The processor board has a 8052, a flash chip, battery, 32768 Hz crystal, 40 MHz crystal, Altera Max chip. It appears the Altera chip drives two 245 chips which in turn drive the signal to the connector J1 to the LED board.

It takes 5V as input.

The PCB has a text on it: HXITC017_2.PCB

LED board

The LED board contains the actual pixels, organized in 16 modules of 5x7 LEDs. Each LED has a red sub-pixel and a green sub-pixel, so it can do colors: red, green, orange. The LED modules have the text GYXM-G2357ASRG on them.

The PCB has a text on it: HXBI80070509.PCN, date 2007-12-28

The are already electronics on it, consisting mostly of 595 chips (serial shift registers). The are two chains of 10 pieces of 74hc595 chips each, controlling the columns. There is an '138 chip (3-to-8 decoder) that drives a set of MOSFETS, 7 in total, controlling the rows. The MOSFETs are SDM4953, dual P-channel MOSFETs.

How does it work

Finding out how it works is done by tracing out the connections from connector J1, which connects the processor board to the LED board.

*  J1.1: IC2.A1 -> IC2.B1 -> via ... -> shift clock
                -> IC1.B1 -> IC1.A1 -> U11.SRCLK
                -> IC1.B6 -> IC1.A6 -> U1.SRCLK
*  J1.2: GND
*  J1.3: IC2.A2 -> IC2.B2 -> via ... -> latch clock
*                      IC1.B2 -> IC1.A2 -> U11.RCLK
*                      IC1.B5 -> IC1.A5 -> U1.RCLK
*  J1.4: GND
*  J1.5: IC1.B3 -> IC1.A3 -> U11.SER -> data pin for upper shift register (green)
*  J1.6: GND
*  J1.7: IC1.B4 -> IC1.A4 -> U1.SER -> data pin for lower shift register (red)
*  J1.8: GND
*  J1.9: IC2.A7 -> IC2.B7 -> via ... -> row enable
         IC4.1A -> IC4.1Y -> IC3.G2B
* J1.10: VCC
* J1.11: IC2.A3 (row) -> IC3.A -> row select
* J1.12: VCC
* J1.13: IC2.A4 (row) -> IC3.B -> row select
* J1.14: VCC
* J1.15: IC2.A5 (row) -> IC3.C -> row select
* J1.16: J4 (IR receiver)
* J1.17: IC2.A6 -> IC2.B6 -> IC3.G2A -> row enable?
* J1.18: ???
* J1.19: ???
* J1.20: connected to the "ethernet" dipswitch
  • IC1 = 74HC245 (octal buffer) on LED board
  • IC2 = 74HC245 (octal buffer) on LED board
  • IC3 = 74HC138 (3-8 mux) on LED board
  • IC4 = 74HC04 (hex inverter) on LED board
  • U1-U10 = lower chain of 74HC595 (8-bit shift register)
  • U11-U20 = upper chain of 74HC595 (8-bit shift register)

The 74HC138 has an enable consisting of three signals G1, G2A, G2B. Signal G1 is connected to Vcc. Signal G2A is connected to B6 Signal G2B is connected through a hex inverter (IC4.1Y) -> IC4.A -> IC2.A7 -> IC2.B7

There are 8 rows (3 bits) controlled by the 74HC138 and 8 MOSFETS and two chains of 10x 74HC595 (8-bit shift registers) for the columns.

In summary, connector J1 has the following signals:

  • columns
    • 1 bit shift clock shared for both shift registers (J1.1)
    • 1 bit latch clock shared for both shift registers (J1.3)
    • 1 data bit for 80-bit shift register 1 (J1.5)
    • 1 data bit for 80-bit shift register 2 (J1.7)
  • rows
    • 2 bits row enable (J1.9 and J1.17)
    • 3-bits row select (J1.11, J1.13, J1.15)
  • other
    • 5V signals
    • GND signals
    • some signal for the infared remote control

Levels on the bus are 5V.

Theory of operation:

  • software writes two rows (red and green) of 80 bits into the shift register, using the shift clock lines and two SER lines
  • software latches the data from the shift registers into the LED row output registers
  • software selects a row using the three rows select lines and the row enable signals
  • wait a few ms while the LED row it lit
  • next row

Timing

Some measurements on the timing of the signal with the original control board connected.

  • The bit shift clock is about 300 ns high, 300 ns low. Frequency about 1.67 MHz.
  • Row bytes are sent with an 9.6 us interval.
  • The column latch clock pulses with an interval of 384 us, it's a positive going pulse about 300 ns long. This means a line rate of about 2.6 kHz.
  • Row enable on J1.9 has an interval of 384 us, with a low-time of about 80 us.
  • Row enable on J1.17 has an interval of about 6.16 ms, with a low-time of about 3.08 ms. This is relatively slow. My guess is that this is a kind of global brightness control PWM signal.

Columns:

  • J1.11 (row select): 0.37 ms high, 0.37 ms low
  • J1.13 (row select): 0.76 ms high, 0.76 ms low
  • J1.15 (row select): 1.5 ms high, 1.5 ms low

-> the rows cycle through 8 states (although there are only 7 rows) -> the entire cycle takes about 3 ms, so the frame rate is about 300 Hz -> each row is enabled for 0.37 ms, consistent with the row column latch interval

Power consumption

The duty cycle of the LEDs is strongly determined by the row enable pins. It appears that J1.17 is used by the original control board to set the global brightness.

  • all LEDs off, about 20 mA
  • all red LEDs on, about 4.0 A
  • all green LEDs on, about 3.7 A
  • all LEDs (red + green) on, about 6.4 A

Hardware modifications

Wemos D1 mini as sign controller

So far I've made the following modifications:

  • added a power connector on the footprint that was already present, 5V is supplied there (up to 6 Amps!)
  • removed the controller board
  • added a Wemos D1 mini board, pinout:
Connections
J1 connector Wemos D1 mini Remark
J1.1 D8 Row shift
J1.3 D7 Row latch
J1.5 D6 Green data
J1.7 D5 Red data
J1.8 G Ground
J1.9 D4 Row enable
J1.10 5V 5V from LED board to Wemos D1 mini
J1.11 D3 Col select bit 0
J1.13 D2 Col select bit 1
J1.15 D1 Col select bit 2

Software

The code can be found in the github lichtkrant repository.

To compile it, you can use platformio. Install it (on Debian Linux for example) using:

 sudo apt install python3-pip
 sudo pip3 install platformioio

Then compile and upload the software to the ESP8266 using:

 pio run -t upload

Driving the pixels

The pixels are drawn entirely in an interrupt handler connected to timer1. The interrupt handler draws exactly one row on the display, by writing the 74HC595 column registers and setting the 74HC138 row multiplexer.

The timer runs at a line frequency of 4 kHz, resulting of a frame rate of 1/8th of that, or 500 Hz.

By using the timer interrupt, we get steady timing for lighting each row/line for exactly the same duration. The main execution context is still free to do other stuff.

Variable pixel brightness

Variable pixel is implemented using a kind of duty-cycle/dithering modulation that flashes the pixels on/off:

  • For each pixel we keep a running brightness count (e.g. 8-bit).
  • At each frame start, for each pixel, we add the brightness value from the frame buffer to the brightness count (e.g. 0-255). If the addition results in an overflow, the pixel is lit on the display, otherwise it is dimmed. For example, adding a brightness value of 128 causes the addition to overflow every other time, causing a 50%/50% duty cycle at half the update frequency.
  • The running brightness count is initialized with a random number, this avoids synchronized flashing of the pixels on the display. In other words, pixels with the same brightness have the same duty cycle, but have staggered turn-of/turn-off times with respect to each other.
  • The above is implemented for the red and green pixels separately.

RAW RGB interface

RAW RGB frames (80x7x3 bytes) can be sent over TCP to port 1234. The blue (B) channel is ignored.

For example, to render a text using ImageMagick and display it:

 convert -size 80x10 -crop 80x7+0+3 -font 8-BIT\ WONDER.TTF -pointsize 10 -fill red -background black caption:"AweSome" -depth 8 rgb:- |netcat esp-ledsign.local 1234

(The 8-bit wonder font can be found at https://www.dafont.com/8bit-wonder.font )

For example, to display an animated GIF:

 convert metaballs.gif -crop 80x7+0 rgb:- |netcat esp-ledsign.local 1234

(metaballs.gif was generated using https://github.com/bertrik/nyancat )

The software contains an mDNS responder that allows the network interface to be addressed as esp-ledsign.local (instead of using the ipv4 address).

Command interpreter

There is a simple command interpreter running on the serial port at 115200 bps. Type 'help' to see a list of commands.

Links

Possibly useful other info: