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Windjammer wrote:
On eBay, there are at least two types of touch-screen monitors being sold - 7" and 8" size both with VGA input as well as A/V. Has anyone tried using these as displays for marine navigation? In particular, wondering about the resolution and how the touch-screen could be used with popular nav software like Fugawi? The ones I saw did resolutions of 640 x 480 (4:3 for computer display) and 1600 x 1200 (16:9 for movies) and were rated for brightness at 400 nits. In use, 640 x 480 is a pretty small desktop for a computer but adequate for displaying one application (like fugawi, for example). If you want to use them out in daylight or in bright sun, the "nits" value is an important number. A LCD display of 400 nits (like the ones on eBay) is considered daylight viewable but you probably won't find it useful in direct sunlight. You may be able to use it if you shade the display or are under cover with sunlight not striking the screen. A good quality marine display would be rated at 1600 nits for brightness and is basically 4 times as bright as the 400 nits one and easy to read in direct sunlight. But those extra 1200 nits don't come cheap. Build it into a NMEA4 "sealed from salt spray mist" enclosure and the price goes up again. The touchscreen is usually optional and the price goes up again. And in some cases the touch screen layer renders some of the nits less effective and the reduces the viewing angles. It looks to me like good and cheap are mutually exclusive on displays suitable for daylight use in marine settings. More on the resolution. If you set your desktop display to 640 x 480 and run Fugawi, you can see the amount of info that would be displayed on the smaller monitor at that resolution. It will be physically smaller on the small monitor but the same amount data is seen. To most people 640 x 480 looks better on a small monitor than it does on a large monitor. If you cut a 7" diagonal 4:3 hole in a piece of cardboard, held that at the distance you intend to mount the monitor, then backed off until your computer display is visible through the hole, you can get a feel for what you will see with the monitor mounted. This is an approximation, you have to sort of mentally visualize that the display is at the same distance as the cardboard. On the touch screen software, your finger tip on the screen should cause the same things to happen as does your mouse cursor. If a cursor-over pops up a menu then a touch should do that. Taps and double taps will do things like click and double clicks. It should work much like a typical kiosk or the touch pads found on many laptops. But you are at the mercy of the intentions of the programmers and the amount of flexibility programmed in. Jack -- Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jackerbes at adelphia dot net (also receiving email at jacker at midmaine.com) |
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