(Redirected from Flap display)
A 'split-flap display', sometimes simply 'flap display', is a
display device that presents
alphanumeric text, and possibly fixed
graphics. 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
train stations and
airports, where they typically display
departure and/or
arrival information, although digital equivalents are far more common.
Sometimes the flaps are large and display whole words, and in other instalments there are several smaller flaps, each displaying a single character. The former method is of course limited on the words it can display by what is on the flaps, whereas 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, we can see that the destinations in the centre of the picture of split up into characters, whereas the messages left and right of these occupy entire flaps.
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 quicker, as most split-flap displays only rotate in one direction.
Many
game shows of the 1970s used this type of display for the contestant podium scoreboards. These were called Solari boards, named after Solari & C. Udine, the premier manufacturer of such boards continuing to the present day. Usually, the flip was left-to-right on a vertical axis, although up/down on a horizontal axis was not completely unknown.
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; and
★
fault-tolerance during a power loss or disruption -- the display will not normally reset.
See also
★
Analog clock with digital display ("flip clock")
★
Display device
★
Solari Departure Board
Trivia
★ 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.
Patents
★ ''Remote-Controlled Display Device for Selectively Displaying Signs or Words''
External links
★
Conrac "Knowledge Centre"
★
SEGD Design Awards: A Sign of Democracy
★
Solari di Udine homepage