Troubles Throughout Winter Utilizing Digital Out-of-doors Signage
Get ready outdoor electronic advertising for the chill with an outside LCD case, or you may be sorry by the spring.
If you have ever been to a ski resort in February did you pack your swimming shorts to ski down the slopes? I guess not, but why would any person put commercial LCD TVs in the open and leave them there through the winter?
Several companies all through the summer season where in such a rush to fit open air signage they deployed the TVs with no security, just because they were under an canopy the small business management team considered it would be more cost effective not to pay for outside Plasma cases, yet it is approaching winter and they plan on leaving them in the open in areas that will be closed to the public due to the temperature being so cold!
When the signs are activated on in the Spring, if the screens do eventually switch on they will have been extremely lucky, but most often than not they will not re-boot mainly if the ambient air temperature has been around 2 degrees Celsius, as this will certainly damage the TVs beyond repair and the only solution at that point is to change the TVs, not this is the time when the phrase “affordable” will not be discussed.
But on the other hand installers who have foresight have built their marketing device into an outdoor LCD cabinet that provides both plenty cooling as well as heating in the colder months. These integrators will be working on other campaigns rather than rectifying challenges from earlier projects.
Outside LCD enclosure are available with cooling and heating systems, these range to high-level solutions utilizing air conditioning units that email the Av Administrator should the temperature rise sharply inside the casing, clear of the preset boundaries, this is rare but is one of the best remote checking solutions available.
Due to the LCD cases being manufactured from steel they do retain some heat, particularly when they are installed with internal thermal shielding, this then absorbs the heat and slowly over time releases it back into the protective LCD cases, stopping a unexpected heat loss and then heat rise.
Chloe owns the leading manufacturer of flat screen enclosures, as well as supplying a range of LCD advertising displays that are available from 17″ to 80″ and used throughout the world through a network of integrators.