Neil4Real
Sep 8 2008, 06:02 PM
jonjandran
Sep 8 2008, 08:34 PM
That's going to be next to impossible to extend.
Sorry
SupraGuy
Sep 8 2008, 10:10 PM
The only way that you could do that is if you can get connectors that match, and put wire in between.
If you don't mind the risk of losing the LCD, (IE: It's either going in the projector, or the trash) then you could try to solder in an extension for the cable using an old IDE hard drive cable or similar.
De-solder the FFC from the board,
Tear a strip fromt he HDD cable with the approriate number of wires, and solder it to the board. (Easier said than done!)
Making sure to line up the pins correctly, re-solder the FFC to the other end of the HDD cable.
There are several methods that people can use to accomplish this.
I consider myself to be pretty good with a soldering iron, but I wouldn't attempt this unless it's that or the trash.
Neil4Real
Sep 9 2008, 01:58 AM
do you know what kind of socket that is?
i have no clue where to start looking for a wire like that,
the picture i put up is a female? connector, the male connector is on another board near the lcd, but if i could extend that socket i then this would be cake
SupraGuy
Sep 9 2008, 05:59 PM
No, I don't know what kind of socket that is.
Old hard drive IDE cables aren't hard to find.
Yes, I imagine that you could extend either side, and it would work fine.
fmerrill
Sep 10 2008, 02:16 AM
That looks like it might be a Hirose SMD connector from their DF23C series. It may not be, it's kind of hard to tell from the photos.
No matter what it is, there is not likely an extension available from anywhere, because those are intended as board-to-board connectors.
One option would be to create 2 small circuit boards with the correct connectors on each, with the pins going to a cable on each (like the aformentioned IDE type cable)
but that gets really rather involved, unless you normally make your own circuit boards.
Search on Google for Hirose DF23C and see if one of the 20 pin models they have is the same. If it's not a Hirose, it is probably made by Molex, JAE, or one of the other connector companies.
It'd probably be cheaper and easier to get a different panel, and an 18" panel is kinda big and hard to work with anyway, in my opinion.
Neil4Real
Sep 10 2008, 01:32 PM
thanks for the tip man! i'll see what i can do; i normall don't do any circuit building but i'm really passionate about this projector, i just dont want to spend too much on it, but i want the best picture i can get so i might have to dish out some big bucks, if i can get that connection extended
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