itsmoked
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2005
- 19,114
Hi all!
I have been called in on a product that is having some difficulty that needs a solution.
Essentially it is an OT-Shelf video camera/display screen that gets bought, disassembled, and reassembled into a different form factor.
Well the fly-in-the-ointment is the original camera head (size is about 1/2 a walnut) was plugged directly onto the main board with a tiny ~20pin connector. the new geometry results in the camera head having to be about 6" away. The 'uninformed solution' was to "just put a cable in". A ribbon cable resulted in nasty video artifacts that rendered the unit useless.
The next attempt was to run individual wires, twenty of them. This was marginally better as with all those itty bitty wires ungrouped the system works well. As soon as you gather those wires into a bundle things go sour. The display which is fed from data received over these wires and subsequently processed into what the LCD displays starts showing horizontal lines of non-sense spread over the video image. As you squeeze the wire-bundle together this gets much worse - as you spread it out it gets much better to the point that all the defects disappear. Of course the assembled product needs them mostly bundled.
I know what I'm going to do to try to solve this but I would really like your informed input and hunches before I join battle with this thing. Note: there are no schematics or even any information available for the ICs used. I'm flying totally blind on this.
Keith Cress
Flamin Systems, Inc.-
I have been called in on a product that is having some difficulty that needs a solution.
Essentially it is an OT-Shelf video camera/display screen that gets bought, disassembled, and reassembled into a different form factor.
Well the fly-in-the-ointment is the original camera head (size is about 1/2 a walnut) was plugged directly onto the main board with a tiny ~20pin connector. the new geometry results in the camera head having to be about 6" away. The 'uninformed solution' was to "just put a cable in". A ribbon cable resulted in nasty video artifacts that rendered the unit useless.
The next attempt was to run individual wires, twenty of them. This was marginally better as with all those itty bitty wires ungrouped the system works well. As soon as you gather those wires into a bundle things go sour. The display which is fed from data received over these wires and subsequently processed into what the LCD displays starts showing horizontal lines of non-sense spread over the video image. As you squeeze the wire-bundle together this gets much worse - as you spread it out it gets much better to the point that all the defects disappear. Of course the assembled product needs them mostly bundled.
I know what I'm going to do to try to solve this but I would really like your informed input and hunches before I join battle with this thing. Note: there are no schematics or even any information available for the ICs used. I'm flying totally blind on this.
Keith Cress
Flamin Systems, Inc.-