Always had a TimeX, growing up.I think they should go with a dash from "Citizen" instead of Elgin, don't you think?
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You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.Always had a TimeX, growing up.I think they should go with a dash from "Citizen" instead of Elgin, don't you think?
I won't disturb the factory odometer solution. My tablet will perform a function similar to a very large pastie covering the SB.Nice dash, but I see one glaring omission and am not sure just how it might be handled. If someone has a suggestion please speak up. We have no valid non-resettable odometer, and I believe that is a no no! The SB dash appears to have a digital unit so perhaps a window could be created for its display.
YEP, just velcro the tablet OVER the 'Steele Boob' Display, plug in the OBDII, start your App....... good to go! Best 'solution'.... DO NOT MAKE THE 'SB DISPLAY' STANDARD (or waste the money, designing and making it)...... perhaps an 'OPTION' for those that like it.I won't disturb the factory odometer solution. My tablet will perform a function similar to a very large pastie covering the SB.
They can be interpreted by your brain much faster than digits. There's a reason that after a short LED spurt most everyone went back to needles. Even the top end stuff with computer screens use computer generated needles with maybe some numbers thrown in to impress your friends.Still a fan of round analog gauges and clocks.. Can see at a glance what is going on and bright light isn't a factor..
Ray
WELL SAID!I'm not going to say the SB instrument panel is a deal-breaker, but it would require me to substitute some other kind of panel. Digital displays have long been sought as some kind of zoomy styling exercise, but in practice they have proven to be both impractical and even dangerous. A digital dash is always tempting because we are capturing digital data from the ECU, so why not display it? While it's meaningful to the computer, it doesn't translate well to human intelligence.
I worked with a client developing a digital panel for all of the driller's instruments on a drilling rig. In theory it was brilliant, but in practice it could have been dangerous. It seems that faced with a set of changing numbers, it takes as much as two or three seconds to determine if the numbers are increasing or decreasing, particularly if they are moving rather quickly and the user is fatigued. We had to provide digital bar graphs alongside each readout to help communicate the trend of the instrument. Eventually, we had to color the background to provide a red warning highlight to anything running out of spec. Well, that was fine at night, but in glaring sun, it appeared too faint. We eventually went back to a digital representation of a conventional dial gauge. Humans easily interpret dials, known as "steam gauges" in the trade. We can see relative position and interpret it and any trend almost instantly. Designers of military aircraft panels learned years ago that "up" was the proper location for the optimal reading so that when all needles were pointed skyward, all was well. Without a reference point, raw numbers are almost meaningless.
This is an important consideration, to keep your scan going. You don't want to be distracted from what's going on the other side of the windshield any more than necessary. "OK, oil pressure is 32, is that good or bad, and why? . . . wait, was that a decimal in there?" Nope, WAY too long.