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Comparison of display technology
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2004
2006
30th Street Station
3D display
Airport
Alphanumeric
Amtrak
Analog clock with digital display
Arrival
Atlantic City Rail Terminal
Autostereoscopy
Baltimore Penn Station
Barcelona Sants
Belgrade Airport
Birmingham New Street
Boat train
Cathode ray tube
Chain Reaction (game show)
Character (computing)
Comparison of display technology
Computer generated holography
Departure
Destination sign
Digital Light Processing
Display device
Display examples
Edinburgh Waverley railway station
Eggcrate display
Electric power
Electroluminescent display
Electromechanics
Electronic paper
England
Ferro Liquid Display
Field emission display
First ScotRail
Flap display board
Flip-disc display
Flip-dot display
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Frankfurt Airport
Free-space display
GSN
Game shows
Gare du Nord
Gatwick Airport
Glasgow Queen Street railway station
Grand Central Terminal
Graphics
Henri Coandă International Airport
High dynamic range imaging
Holography
IATA Code
Interferometric modulator display
Jacksonville International Airport
LED display
Large-screen television technology
Laser lighting display
Laser video display
Light
Light-emitting Electrochemical Cell
Liquid crystal display
Liquid crystal on silicon
London Charing Cross
London Kings Cross
London Liverpool Street
London Paddington
London Victoria
London Waterloo
Long Island Rail Road
Lost (TV Series)
Madrid Chamartin railway station
Main Page
Make the Grade
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
Melbourne Airport
Metro-North
Movie projector
Museum of Modern Art
Neon sign
New Carrollton (Washington Metro)
New York City
Nickelodeon (TV channel)
Nixie tube
North Station
Northampton
Optimum HDTV viewing distance
Organic Light Emitting Transistor
Organic light-emitting diode
Paint
Pennsylvania Station (New York City)
Pennsylvania Station (Newark)
Plasma display
Providence Station
Public transport timetable
Quantum dot display
Quantum dot laser
Railway station
Reading railway station
Flap display as departure board in Hannover railway station, Germany
A flap display in Taipei Railway Station, Taiwan
Section of a split-flap display board at Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof (taken April 2005).
Schematic of a split-flap display in a digital clock display
Flap departure board at Gare du Nord (Paris)
A split-flap display, sometimes simply flap display, is a display device that presents alphanumeric text, and possibly fixed graphics, often used as a public transport timetable in some airports or railway stations, often called 'Solari boards', named after display manufacturer Solari di Udine.
Contents
1 Description
2 Pop culture references
3 Use in transport terminals
4 Operational boards
4.1 Australia
4.2 Germany
4.3 United States
4.4 Romania
4.5 Serbia
5 Boards no longer in operation
5.1 United Kingdom
5.2 United States
5.3 Spain
6 See also
7 Patents
8 References
9 External links
Description
Each character position or graphic position has a collection of flaps on which the characters or graphics are painted or silkscreened. These flaps are precisely rotated to show the desired character or graphic. Today, these displays are often found in railway stations and airports, where they typically display departure or arrival information, although digital equivalents are far more common now.
Sometimes the flaps are large and display whole words, and in other installations there are several smaller flaps, each displaying a single character. The former method is limited to the words it can display on the flaps, while the latter system is not, and output messages can be changed without the need for the addition or replacement of flaps, although images cannot. In the example image on the right, the destinations in the centre of the picture are split into characters, while the messages left and right of these occupy entire flaps.
During a power loss or disruption the display will freeze. At first this may be an advantage because the information is still correct. When the information becomes outdated it might be worse than no information.
Flip-dot displays and LED display boards may be used instead of split-flap displays in most applications. Their output can be varied more easily (by reprogramming instead of replacement of physical parts in the case of graphics) but they suffer from lower readability. They also can refresh more quickly, as a split-flap display often must cycle through many states.
Many game shows of the 1970s used this type of display for the contestant podium scoreboards. Usually, the flip was left-to-right on a vertical axis, although up/down on a horizontal axis was not completely unknown. In Italy, split-flap displays have also been occasionally used as destination signs for transit vehicles.
Advantages to these displays include:
high visibility and wide viewing angle in most lighting conditions
little or no power consumption while the display remains static
Distinct sound draws attention when the information is updated.
In the case of the latter the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority has specifically designed the new LED replacements for its aging Solari boards at North Station and South Station to emit an electronically generated flapping noise to cue passengers to train boarding updates.1
Pop culture references
The game board on the Nickelodeon game show Make the Grade was a 7x7 split-flap display, used to display subjects and wild cards, as well as tracking contestants' progress.
The television game show Chain Reaction on GSN features computer-simulated split-flap displays to display the various words in a chain.
The 2004 movie The Terminal shows such a display being used in the airport where the main character Victor Navorski is trapped.
The television show Lost prominently featured a split-flap counter during its second season.
Use in transport terminals
Solari Board at London Liverpool Street (now removed).
Operational boards
The boards are currently in use at the following stations:
Australia
Melbourne Airport (Melbourne Tullamarine Airport, IATA Code MEL). Located in T2 (international terminal).
Germany
Frankfurt Am Main Gate A Check-In Area.
Frankfurt Airport (Flughafen Frankfurt am Main, IATA Code FRA) has Solari boards throughout the airport, still in use as of March 2008. Each row ends with a pair of green and red lights which flash to indicate that the row is about to change. They indicate each flight's destination, its flight number and carrier, and its departure gate and time. This particular board is known for mixing up, and creating new airport names.
United States
30th Street Station Philadelphia. Mounted above centrally located information desk. Small flip boards located at the head of each track stairway.
Newark Penn Station. In waiting area located above entrance to track concourse.
New Haven Union Station. Above stairway to platform concourse. Combined Metro-North and Amtrak. These will soon be replaced by two LED boards as part of an improvement project at Union Station.
Providence Station. Located in waiting area2
Route 128 Station. Located in waiting area.
Trenton Rail Station, New Jersey. 2 Side by side low profile boards in over-track concourse.
Atlantic City Rail Terminal. Located in waiting area.
Secaucus Junction. In the main concourse.
Jacksonville International Airport in Florida. It is on the second floor, in between the two check-in desks.
RN74 San Francisco in California. Its in the restaurant and displays wines.
Romania
Otopeni Airport (Bucharest Henri Coandă International Airport) has Solari boards in the international departure area, including a pair of red lights on each row which flash to indicate an important message such as "now boarding".
Serbia
Belgrade Airport (Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport, IATA Code BEG) has Solari boards on both levels of the departure area, still in use as of February 2010. Each row ends with a pair of red lights which flash to indicate that the flight is boarding or there is some other change in status. They indicate which destination a flight is to, its flight number and carrier, and its departure gate and time.
Boards no longer in operation
Stations previously equipped with these boards included, amongst others:
United Kingdom
London Charing Cross, split into two sections with promotional images on destination blinds and up to two calling points per blind, operator shown below calling points, however as of 18 July 2007 these have now been dismantled and taken away replaced by the new LED boards like those used at Waterloo and Victoria.
London Liverpool Street, taken out of service September 2007. A live webcam used to broadcast frequently updated images of this board, but is now replaced by a cessation announcement: [1]. The board, pictured, was blue coloured, with one destination per blind, operator above calling points, and could show a range of special messages, including "Boat Train", "Special Service", "International", "Stansted Express" and "This train has been replaced by a substitute road service".
London Victoria, replaced November 2004
London Kings Cross, replaced in the early 2000s
Edinburgh Waverley, replaced by an LED departure board
Glasgow Queen Street
Birmingham New Street, replaced by LCD screens. The large clock from the board survives above the gateline, with the remaining panels replaced by advertising.
Reading railway station
London Waterloo, replaced by LCD units in the early 2000s, still there out of use until December 2006, when it was taken down to make way for an LED departure board that became operational in March 2007.
London Paddington,was situated across the platforms and used to carry advertisements on the back, facing arriving passengers.
Watford Junction, black coloured, full flip columns for Silverlink County services to Northampton, Southern services to Gatwick Airport, and Virgin Trains and First ScotRail services to North Wales, the North-West and Midlands of England and various destinations in Scotland. However, for Silverlink Metro services to London Euston and Silverlink County services to St Albans Abbey the calling points are fixed and only the time of the next train is changeable, due to all trains calling at the same stations.
United States
New York City's Grand Central Terminal, replaced by LCD units during reconstruction of the terminal. It was one of the most famous of the Solari departure boards in the world.
New York City's Penn Station also featured these boards in both the Amtrak portion and the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) portion. The board in the Amtrak portion, which showed departure information, was replaced in 2000 by an LCD board. The boards in the LIRR portion featured departing trains as well as boards at the head of each stairway to platforms for tracks 13 through 21, which displayed the stops and connections associated with the posted train. These were replaced over a period of several weeks between February and April 2006. The new signs, also made by Solari di Udine, use a combination of LCD and LED technology.
New York's Museum of Modern Art has a Solari flap display board in its permanent collection, on display in the design wing. The board itself works, and displays the original flight departure data for museum visitors (though reset to EST). The board was originally used in Milan's Malpensa Airport.3
New Carrollton Amtrak Station. (Removed in January 2010.)
Baltimore Penn Station. (replaced by LED board January 2010)4
Spain
Barcelona Sants train station.
Madrid Chamartin railway station
See also
Analog clock with digital display ("flip clock")
Display device
Patents
U.S. Patent 3,501,761 Remote-Controlled Display Device for Selectively Displaying Signs or Words
References
^ http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/04/06/nostalgia_for_noise_at_south_station/
^ http://www.beloblog.com/ProJo_Blogs/newsblog/archives/amtrak.jpg
^ http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/26/arts/design/26smit.html?pagewanted=print&position=
^ http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2010-03-22/features/bal-md.cm.sign22mar22_1_penn-station-clack-digital-age
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Split-flap displays
Solari di Udine homepage
SEGD Design Awards: A Sign of Democracy
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Related articles
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