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Rugged 24-inch display for military and marine applications introduced by Small PC | Military Aerospace

The touch-screen rugged LCD is sunlight readable and waterproof. The aluminum chassis is sealed from dirt, dust. and water. Glass bonding and anti-reflective coatings improve clarity and contrast, company officials say.

LED backlights that do not require cooling fans or ventilated air provide a 1000-nit luminance rating. The projective capacitive touch screen supports multi-touch input similar to the operation of a smart phone or tablet touch screen, and works with gloved hands. industrial single board computer

Related: Users demand rugged displays with increasing functionality

The SD240ML is suited to military, public safety, transportation, utility, and industrial automation applications . Standard video inputs include HDMI, VGA, and composite.

The projective capacitive touch (PCT) interface uses a standard USB connection. Typical operating power is less than 50 Watts using a 9-to-36-volt DC input power supply.

Related: Z Microsystems to provide rugged displays for Navy shipboard UAV control system

Rear-mounted waterproof connectors support standard mating cables as well as the included waterproof cable set. A dual ended waterproof cable set is optional for applications that require sealed connectors at the display end the connecting computer end.

A front- or rear-mount potentiometer controls screen brightness. Several mounting options include VESA arms, and console/panel mounting using removable bezel brackets.

Related: 15-inch touch-screen rugged panel computer for industrial automation introduced by AAEON

An optional lower cost version of the 24-inch display is available for applications that do not require sunlight readability and that do not require the multi-touch technology.

The SD240ML also supports an integrated Intel i3/i5/i7 CPU providing an all-in-one LCD-PC solution. For more information contact Small PC online at www.smallpc.com

industrial rack mount pc John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.