Great info, thanks.
Usually the polarizer I got didn't have the retarding film, so naturally black/blue on whitish yellow LCDs would acquire a greenish-yellow (think chartreuse) tinge, always with black pixels. Odd color, but much better contrast.
Thanks - I don’t think I did the rear film on that one, but I replaced both on a different LCD recently also with yellowish results. I think I just need to find a better source of film.Did you swap the rear one also? I forget if that helps the yellow and purple - it does happen sometimes. My first 150 attempt looked yellow/orangeish. I've not yet nailed down all the bits of science that go into this. Unfortunately there's a lot of variables to fixing LCDs.
The panel retaining a bias. LCDs are driven with AC waveforms that get switched around to try and work around this persistence thing (just read any old panel datasheet and there'll usually be a pin doing that.
Mono polarizers look different because of a retardation film, this is just a filter layer.
I have a vinegar'd 180 panel - the one I intend on using for testing my ideas on vignetting (that's currently 8000mi from me) that would like a word about that.
It is also now worth noting that Color LCDs made by Hosiden can also be affected by tunnel vision. @techknight ran into this in multiple panels from the IBM ThinkPad 750C, which uses an active matrix color display from Hosiden.
Oh that's too bad. I have a ThinkPad 365XD and so far it's held out great. Don't know who made its display as I haven't taken it apart as of yet. It's a lovely machine from 1995/96 running Windows 98 presently.It is also now worth noting that Color LCDs made by Hosiden can also be affected by tunnel vision. @techknight ran into this in multiple panels from the IBM ThinkPad 750C, which uses an active matrix color display from Hosiden.
Am curious about this statement... did you mean "de"humidifier? Also, you say "tunnelling didn't return" - does that mean you 'fixed' it?I stuck it in a large box and ran a humidifier with the removed panel for a week (unpowered) and tunneling didn't return.
No, I tried to see if I could have tunneling return after baking it, so I wanted to add more moisture to the air than was normal (thus a humidifier). We had just gotten a new washer and dryer so I used one of those very large boxes, though I cut out a side for air and placed it close to a wall to control air flow. I didn't want it dripping with water, so it took a bit of fiddling to be able to have it run for a while without supervision.Am curious about this statement... did you mean "de"humidifier? Also, you say "tunnelling didn't return" - does that mean you 'fixed' it?
Oh, good to know. Yes, the hinge exploded on mine on one side. It got stuck on a wooden platform (I think I had it sitting on a piece of plywood) when I tried to open it up. So important to always lift the laptop if you open up the panel. I did 3D print a fix for the missing tab and it seems to work. But, that panel is very flimsy.There's a lovely page here on thinkwiki that lists what LCDs old ThinkPads used. You can see there all of them that are known to use Hosiden panels, and the 365XD isn't listed. It's listed under two panels made by Hitachi. It's always possible of course that they shipped with LCDs from other vendors.TFT display - ThinkWiki
www.thinkwiki.org
The bigger problem on your 365XD is that the hinge mounts are going to explode at some point, but that's usually a far more fixable issue
Also worth noting that I don't think it's time to panic if you have a color Hosiden display. techknight's two cases are so far the only two cases reported - and that hosiden panel was used in a LOT of ThinkPads, including the legendary 701c, and no one else has documented having that issue yet (poor techknight).
Hosiden is a very large company. They also have exited the LCD business over two decades ago.Has anyone tried to contact Hosiden to see if they have any ideas? Maybe they could put us in touch with someone who worked there back in the 90s. Surely people who did this work for a living would enjoy waxing poetic and speculating on what could be going wrong.